Showing posts with label Erin Emily Ann Vance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erin Emily Ann Vance. Show all posts

20190221

An interview with Erin Emily Ann Vance

Erin Emily Ann Vance’s work is forthcoming in Coffin Bell Journal, Augur, Post Ghost Press, and Bad Nudes. She is a contributing reader and writer for Awkward Mermaid Literary Magazine. A 2017 recipient of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts Young Artist Prize and a 2018 Finalist for the Alberta Magazine Awards in Fiction, she completed her MA in Creative Writing in August 2018, and will complete an MA in Folklore in 2020. Erin's debut novel, Advice for Amateur Beekeepers and Taxidermists will be published by Stonehouse Publishing in 2019.

How did you begin writing, and what keeps you going?

I started writing as a child. My parents were readers and my father is a songwriter, so I had plenty of inspiration and encouragement. One of my fondest memories is coming home from school to dozens of books laid out on my bed- my mother would go to the thrift store every so often and load up on books for me and my brother to read, and leave them on our beds for us to find. My grandmother lived with us growing up, and she was also a voracious reader. I think that seeing the people I loved surrounded by books and finding joy in those books motivated me to write and try and spark some of that joy.

I think what keeps me going is seeing how much incredible work is produced every day and wanting (selfishly) to be a part of that! I find it hard to fall in love with a novel or poem and not be compelled to write afterwards.

Your author biography mentions a novel forthcoming this year. Are you able to work on poetry at all during the composition of a novel? How are you able to keep the two separate?

I almost always write poetry and prose simultaneously. In my third year of university I took two full-year creative writing classes in poetry and fiction. I spent a year negotiating between the two genres. It was such an incredible (and challenging) experience; I had classes until 9pm, sometimes 10pm Tuesday and Wednesday for an entire year. I wrote so much in that year that I couldn't help but grow and adapt. Since then, my writing has become more hybrid (my novel has poetry interspersed with the prose), and I've come to use different genres as a sort of 'reset' button. Stuck on the novel? Write a poem. Stuck on the poetry manuscript? Write a short story. Writing poetry makes me a better fiction writer, so I can't imagine writing one without dipping my toes in the other periodically.

What poets have influenced the ways in which you write?

There are scores of poets who I admire and return to over and over. Right now I am obsessed with Sonya Vatomsky's collection Salt is for Curing and the work of Irish poet Doireann Ní Ghríofa. I found that, while studying at the Seamus Heaney Centre in Belfast this past summer, that the culture around poetry I grew up in was very much anti-sentimentality, anti-feelings, anti-cheesiness. I absolutely think that overly sentimental writing can be weak and overwrought, but it doesn't have to be. A lot of the Irish poetry I've read leaves hints of sentimentality and emotion in, and the work remains strong and poignant. Ní Ghríofa's teaching and her work gave me permission, in a way, to write about my feelings unabashedly for the first time in years.

How important has mentorship been to your work? Is there anyone who specifically assisted your development as a writer?

This question always leaves me feeling warm and fuzzy. I've been SO fortunate in terms of mentorship. Judith Williams has been a mentor of mine since I was about twelve years old. She has been a rock, a cheerleader, and an incredible support in my life for years. I owe so much to her. I had the opportunity to work with Sheri D Wilson when I was younger and learned so much from the Mama of Dada. She taught me fierceness and courage. Lisa Murphy Lamb met me when I was fifteen and the fact that she put up with my ridiculous teenage antics at summer camp and became a strong mentor to me is proof of how dedicated to enriching the lives of young writers she is. Sandy Pool was instrumental in helping me find my voice, and Aritha van Herk changed my life, taught me to have a thick skin, and her classes were nothing short of fundamental in my development as a writer. Suzette Mayr is my masters supervisor and has helped me through procrastination, self-doubt, and imposter syndrome. I could talk about these women for hours, and they deserve every accolade. In 2019, I will be engaging in my first formal mentorship under the guidance of Kimmy Beach with the Writers Guild of Alberta Mentorship Program. I look forward to this greatly.

What are you currently working on?

I JUST finished my masters thesis, which was a novel about a young, isolated woman who has epilepsy and falls pregnant. It's a ghost story and is very close to my heart as I also have epilepsy. I'm also working on polishing my novel, Advice for Taxidermists and Amateur Beekeepers, set to be released next year. I just finished a chapbook, The Sorceress who Left Too Soon: Poems After Remedios Varo and will be working on a follow-up chapbook of poems after Leonora Carrington. In addition, I'm working on a full-length poetry collection and a short story collection. In July my partner and I are moving to Dublin so that I can pursue folklore studies at University College Dublin, and I'm excited to see how my studies in Dublin influence my writing.

Can you name a poet you think should be receiving more attention?

I discovered Sandra Kasturi's books Come Late to the Love of Birds and The Animal Bridegroom this past summer. I devoured both books and Kasturi has since become one of my biggest literary influences. I think she should be read more widely as she is doing interesting, important work that is unique and exciting.


20190204

harvest

Erin Emily Ann Vance


when you were laid off from the honey farm
because the wine wasn't selling, I wondered
if you should have told the queens before you
left, because they should prepare themselves
for the rough hands of other keepers, they

need time to forget your smoky eyes and the
way you thanked them for their honey. when
you came home smelling like honey and mud
for the last time I wondered if you were a
different person than you had been before
the bees I wondered if I was a different person
than I had been before the bees I wondered
how much of us had become honey and wine.
when you kissed me with the thickness of
unpasteurized honey and the ache of unfiltered
mead I knew that the bees had followed you
home that each august would bring swarms
and that every time a wasp entered our home
we would somehow expel it and continue to
create our own shelter and food and love



Erin Emily Ann Vance’s work is forthcoming in Coffin Bell Journal, Augur, Post Ghost Press, and Bad Nudes. She is a contributing reader and writer for Awkward Mermaid Literary Magazine. A 2017 recipient of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts Young Artist Prize and a 2018 Finalist for the Alberta Magazine Awards in Fiction, she will complete her MA in Creative Writing in August 2018 and an MA in Folklore in 2020. Erin's debut novel, Advice for Amateur Beekeepers and Taxidermists will be published by Stonehouse Publishing in 2019.

20190114

Train : a journal of prose poems


Issue #3 : Simon Brown Carlie Blume Conyer Clayton Ariel Dawn Kate Feld Mike Ferguson M.W. Jaeggle Aaron Kreuter Amy LeBlanc John Luna Ian Martin rob mclennan Pearl Pirie Adam Strauss Erin Emily Ann Vance

A limited amount of copies will be available for free at the following locations:
Open Books: A Poem Emporium (Seattle WA), Berl's Brooklyn Poetry Shop (Brooklyn NY), knife| fork | book (Toronto ON) and Passages Bookshop (Portland OR).



Includes shipping
Four-issue subscriptions are also available:



Includes shipping
Simon Brown (1979) is a self-taught poet and interdisciplinary artist from the traditional territory of the Passamaquoddy nation (southwestern New Brunswick) currently based in rural Québec. His French and English texts have been presented in collaborative artworks, performances, collections and artist books, and in magazines such as Lemon Hound, Estuaire, Vallum, Poetry Is Dead, Watts, and The Blasted Tree. As a translator, he has adapted texts by Erin Robinsong, Angela Carr, Danielle LaFrance and Jacob Wren, among others. Recent collections include Grande poussière (with Maude Pilon, squint press, Montréal, 2017) and Outre-flaques (Vanloo, Marseille, 2018).

Carlie Blume is an emerging writer of fiction and poetry.  Her writing centres around deconstructing myths about sexuality, motherhood, and mental health. Her work has been featured in The Maynard, Loose Lips and Pulp Mag. She lives in Surrey and is currently working on her first collection of poetry, as well as a novel.


Conyer Clayton is an Ottawa based artist who aims to live with compassion, gratitude, and awe. Her most recent chapbooks are: Undergrowth (bird, buried press), Mitosis (In/Words Magazine and Press), and For the Birds. For the Humans. (battleaxe press). She released a collaborative album with Nathanael Larochette, If the river stood still, in August 2018. Her work appears in ARC, Prairie Fire, The Fiddlehead, The Maynard, Puddles of Sky Press, and others. She won Arc's 2017 Diana Brebner Prize, and writes reviews for Canthius. Her debut full length collection of poetry is forthcoming.

Ariel Dawn lives in Victoria, British Columbia. She spends her time writing, reading, and studying Tarot. Recent work appears in canthius, (parenthetical), Foxhole, Room, and is forthcoming in A Furious Hope anthology.

Kate Feld writes essays, poetry, short fiction and work that sits between forms. Her writing has appeared in journals and anthologies including Hotel, The Stinging Fly and The Letters Page.

Mike Ferguson is an American permanently resident in the UK and widely published in online magazines. His most recent print collection is the sonnets chapbook Precarious Real [Maquette Press, 2016] and he edited with Rupert Loydell the music poems anthology Yesterday’s Music Today [Knives Forks and Spoons Press, 2015]. A retired English teacher, he co-authored the education text Writing Workshops [Cambridge University Press, 2015].

M.W. Jaeggle is a poet from Vancouver, currently living in Montreal. His writing has appeared or is forthcoming in The Dalhousie Review, CV2, Existere, in the anthology Refugium: Poems for the Pacific, and elsewhere. He was longlisted for the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize.

Aaron Kreuter is the author of the poetry book Arguments for Lawn Chairs (Guernica Editions, 2016), and the short story collection You and Me, Belonging (Tightrope Books, 2018). I have had my work appear in journals and magazines such as The Puritan, Grain, Arc, Poetry is Dead, The Temz Review, and other places.


Amy LeBlanc holds a BA (Hons) in English Literature and creative writing from the University of Calgary. She is currently non-fiction editor at filling Station magazine. Her work has appeared, or is scheduled to appear in Room, Prairie Fire, Contemporary Verse 2, and EVENT among others. Amy won the 2018 BrainStorm Poetry Contest for her poem 'Swell'. She is the author of two chapbooks, most recently Ladybird, Ladybird published with Anstruther Press in August 2018.


John Luna: I am a dual Canadian-American citizen born of Mexican + American expatriates. Besides writing, my practice is as a visual artist whose background includes painting, sculpture and installation, and a teacher working in the areas of art, design and art history. I currently reside on an island off of the west coast of N. America. Previous publication of written work in art criticism and poetry has appeared in Ditch, Canadian Art, Border Crossings, Canyon, Cordite, and Matrix, among others. A first collection of poems, Listing (Decoupage Publishing, 2015) was released through a small independent press with the help of a crowdfunding campaign. A second book-length manuscript was recently (2017) shortlisted for the Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry.

Ian Martin is nobody's mom. Ian's work has appeared recently in where is the river, Bad Nudes, Plenitude Magazine, and Pretty Owl Poetry. Ian has published 4 chapbooks, most recently PLACES TO HIDE (Coven Editions, 2018) and YOU'RE GOING TO HAVE TO KEEP THIS UP FOREVER (AngelHousePress, 2018). When he's not writing, Ian develops small games and complains online. [http://ian-martin.net]


rob mclennan currently lives in Ottawa, where he is home full-time with the two wee girls he shares with Christine McNair. The author of more than thirty trade books of poetry, fiction and non-fiction, his most recent titles include the poetry collections How the alphabet was made (Spuyten Duyvil, 2018) and the forthcoming Household items (Salmon Poetry, 2019) and A halt, which is empty (Mansfield Press, 2019). He spent the 2007-8 academic year in Edmonton as writer-in-residence at the University of Alberta, and regularly posts reviews, essays, interviews and other notices at robmclennan.blogspot.com

Pearl Pirie writes in Quebec's countryside. She has 3 trade collections, most recently, the pet radish, shrunken from Book*hug. http://www.pearlpirie.com

Adam Strauss lives in Louisville, KY.  He is the author of one full-length collection: For Days (BlazeVox). Most recently, poems of his appear in Fence, Interim, The Tiny, and the Brooklyn Rail.

Erin Emily Ann Vance’s work is forthcoming in Coffin Bell Journal, Augur, Post Ghost Press, and Bad Nudes. She is a contributing reader and writer for Awkward Mermaid Literary Magazine. A 2017 recipient of the Alberta Foundation for the Arts Young Artist Prize and a 2018 Finalist for the Alberta Magazine Awards in Fiction, she completed her MA in Creative Writing in August 2018, and will complete an MA in Folklore in 2020. Erin's debut novel, Advice for Amateur Beekeepers and Taxidermists will be published by Stonehouse Publishing in 2019.