New England Review

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New Books from NER Writers: A North Country Life

March 4, 2013

northcountryFrom the publisher: “A North Country Life is the story of author Sydney Lea’s powerful connection to his family, friends, and the northern outdoors. Loosely organized by the changing of seasons, different sections feature essays on such topics as childhood family fishing trips in the wilds of Maine, trophy fly-fishing the northern reaches of the Connecticut River, the opening day of turkey hunting season in Vermont, and getting lost in the deep woods while deer hunting. The essays are introspective and dramatic illustrations of the blending of the human and natural worlds; emotion is attached to both spheres and adds texture to the sketches. Readers of varied interests will be drawn to the sincerity of the author’s voice.”

Sydney Lea, founding editor of NER is Vermont Poet Laureate. His story “How in a lifetime?” appeared in NER 20.3, and his essay “Negative Capability in Kansas” appeared on NER Digital.

A North Country Life is available at Skyhorse Publishing.

Filed Under: NER Authors' Books, NER Community Tagged With: A North Country Life, Sydney Lea

Reasons for being there

May 3, 2012

Negative Capability in Kansas | By Sydney Lea

Sydney Lea

I’m just back from a week in Kansas, my reasons for being there irrelevant. I’m thinking of the farmer outside the town I was staying in, the one who said to me, “They think we’re crude and stupid because we’re poor.”

This was far from my first visit to that part of the world, and vehement judgment doesn’t seem part of the citizens’ makeup. But they may resent, however gently, the conspicuous smugness of some northeasterners, their studied diction, their oh-so-refined tastes: certain brand and food fetishisms, certain looks and styles.

On this recent trip, I met a goodly number of people who were anything but crude and stupid, and I noted how many of them were doing things that we all like to talk about: comforting the sick, feeding the hungry, caring for the misfortunate. I ate breakfast every morning, for example, at an eatery called The Gathering Place, run by a local pastor. The menu had “suggested prices” only, the restaurant’s guiding notion being that a customer paid what he or she could, precisely so that those who could pay nothing need not go hungry. In these tough times, a lot of the latter showed up each day.

When I told this or that Kansan I was a poet, I was met with curiosity and genuine interest. Mr. and Mrs. Kansas seemed a lot more willing to walk a mile in my shoes than some of my friends would care to walk in theirs.

One of the things that most attracted me to life as a poet is that lyric can see several sides of an issue, situation or personality at the same time. This is a capacity our nation could surely use. John Keats called it Negative Capability. Kansas people seem to intuit its meaning. Do we?

*

NER Digital is a creative writing series for the web. Sydney Lea, founding editor of NER, is Vermont Poet Laureate. 

Filed Under: NER Digital Tagged With: Negative Capability in Kansas, Sydney Lea

Sydney Lea on Ruth Stone

January 9, 2012

The Burlington Free Press published Sydney Lea’s tribute to the late Ruth Stone:

Editor’s Note: This column was written before former Vermont State Poet Ruth Stone died Nov. 19. Current state poet laureate Sydney Lea writes about how Stone, in a few words, evokes life while writing about loss.

I want to pay a brief and inadequate tribute to Ruth Stone, my predecessor as Vermont Poet Laureate. Ms. Stone is remarkable in every way: 96 years old and all but completely blind, the woman still generates some of America’s most compelling poetry.

[read more]

Filed Under: News & Notes Tagged With: Ruth Stone, Sydney Lea, Vermont Poet Laureate

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Tomas Venclova

Literature & Democracy

Tomas Venclova

“A principled stance against aggression should never turn into blind hatred. Such hatred does not help anyone to win . . .”

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