Poetry Primer #12: Sonja Greckol & Kate Hargreaves

Established poet and women’s activist Sonja Greckol (Skein of Days, Pedlar, 2014) highlights the corporeality of Kate Hargreaves’ debut poetry collection, Leak (BookThug, 2014), as her poetry primer pick.

By:

Share It:

Established poet and women’s activist Sonja Greckol highlights the corporeality of Kate Hargreaves’ debut poetry collection, Leak, as her poetry primer pick. Greckol’s work is inspired by activism: she began writing upon the re-election of Ontario Premier Mike Harris. She’s coordinated poetry for Women and Environments International Magazine and has served as the Associate Rep representative on the National Council of the League of Canadian Poets, and currently works with the Toronto Women’s City Alliance. Her poem “Emilie explains Newton to Voltaire” won the 2008 CBC Poetry Prize. Her most recent collection, 2014’s Skein of Days (Pedlar Press), streams together newspaper headlines, excerpts of Governor General Award-winning poetry collections, and song titles (among other elements) to create an experience that is “cacophonous, soothing, disturbing, comic, comforting, melodic” (The Rusty Toque).Greckol’s pick, Kate Hargreaves, chooses source material in Leak that is a little closer to home: the poet’s own body is juxtaposed against her language. The multi-talented Hargreaves has previously published Talking Derby: Stories from a Life on Eight Wheels (Black Moss, 2012), appeared in numerous literary magazines and anthologies, and serves as a publishing assistant and book designer in Windsor, Ontario. Leak has been called an “exciting poetic debut” by Susan Holbrook – see why for yourself with “Stems”, below.Sonja Greckol on why she chose Kate Hargreaves:Kate Hargreaves — LEAK   …and she piles, plies, pulls, pliés and pleas…and she’s off and playing and turning ..The humanoid tangloid on the cover of Kate Hargreaves’s first poetry collection, Leak, alerted me to the intricacies of a body, lush and darkly striated and entangled in growth. Then the surge of verbs: heap, chew, skim, pore, chip, peel open into a body, always into a body that struggles with itself. I am primed with my own surfeit of breaks, sprains and scars — those storied bumps, falls, incisions, anxieties, fears and joys — that etch each daily life. Hargreaves is playing for keeps here, nothing is frivolous on the inside like nothing is frivolous on the cover; everything appears fantastic, it is all precisely ordered and disordered and present.Each opening riff, musically both casual and precise, lifts and spins me along these verbs that nail quotidian self-care or immolation: She heaps her plate with Brussels sprouts. She chews more than she can bite off. She picks a scab and tucks it into her purse. She pores over her blackheads in the bathroom mirror.. She chips her tooth on a stale raisin. She peels away the skin on the side of her thumb.  Little word puffs to my eye enervate and illuminate a complex embodiment and I am chasing, heelweighted while Hargreaves lifts and spins and undulates: ties her laces, scrapes her shins, composts in her bed, rubs cream onto purple knees shaving around stubble swell.It’s Hargreaves handling of the stuffness of that daily life in a body, in a house, in a city, on roller skates that is arresting. Each poem opens out into complex word play, riven through with paratactic shifts that accumulate a factenergy that threatens to but never comes apart. I am amused and challenged by the bones of her poems, while I rush headlong in awe of her corporeality and my own.  There are no abstractions, no summations to be found in Leak, just delight in the skill and disquiet at the quiet end: my body of work | pressing warm sheets into your hands.
Kate Hargreaves on why she writes poetry, and who her influences are:I hated poetry until I was 18 or 19. I had loved reading my entire life, but somehow hadn’t encountered any poetry that excited me; I went into my undergrad in English and creative writing with the firm belief that poetry was a bunch of abstract, pretentious nonsense and that I would stick to short fiction and never, ever write a poem. Cue some wonderful professors, namely Susan Holbrook and Nicole Markotic, who heaped upon their classes visceral, surprising, playful, energetic poetry from people like Sina Queyras, Fred Wah, Jenny Sampirisi, Nikki Reimer, and Haryette Mullen, who really showed me how vibrant and tangible the form could be. I found out that poetry was a space where I could play with language and question its cliches and idioms without falling into abstraction, and that my favourite poems were the ones that made me feel like they had me by the guts. Those were the poems I wanted to write. Seven years later, I’m absorbed by the play and possibility in poetry, and I don’t think I’ve ever finished writing a short story. ***Follow along with our Poetry Primer series all April long or get the full collection of featured poetry plus a poem from each of our established poets in our new chapbook, ibid. Get a free ebook copy if you buy a collection of poetry from All Lit Up during National Poetry Month.