Anthology Celebrates 15 Years of the Area Program in Poetry Writing

Lisa Spaar's poetry class
Lisa Spaar's poetry class
Cole Geddy

The cover of Quince

To mark its 15th anniversary, UVA’s Area Program in Poetry Writing (APPW) recently published an anthology of alumni poetry, with authors spanning from the program’s first graduates (in 2002) to the most recent class of 2017. Compiled, designed, and edited by an undergraduate student in the program, the anthology features poems on love, loss, anxiety about the state of the world, and hope.  

“The poems speak to one another from across the years,” says Lisa Russ Spaar, professor of English and founder and director of the APPW, sitting in her office in late June. As she flips through the book, each page brings back a memory of a former student. “I cried when I first read this just because it was exciting to see poems in conversation with each other.”

The anthology, titled Quince—Spanish for “fifteen”—features poems by 83 of the APPW’s 150 alumni. It was Spaar’s idea to create the anthology, but she asked Kirsten Hemrich, a rising fourth-year student in the program, to curate and design it. “Despite not knowing anything about publishing or bookmaking, I was excited to take on the project,” Hemrich says.

Kirsten Hemrich, fourth-year student and curator and designer of Quince, an anthology of alumni poetry from UVA's Area Program in Poetry Writing (APPW)
Kirsten Hemrich, fourth-year student and curator and designer of Quince, an anthology of alumni poetry from UVA's Area Program in Poetry Writing (APPW)
Dan Addison / University Communications

In early 2017 Hemrich worked with Spaar to request poems from all APPW alumni via email and then enrolled in Jeb Livingood’s popular desktop publishing class called Literary Editing, in which he trains students in Adobe InDesign and the Chicago Manual of Style. “That class was essential in the making of Quince,” Hemrich says. “Jeb is a great instructor and problem solver.”

Livingood, who also teaches fiction writing and is the associate director of UVA’s creative writing program, suggested the title for the anthology. “My daughter was taking Spanish at the time, so I thought of quince,” he says. “It had an aura of poetry to it, and we it liked the ambiguity of it—it could mean the number fifteen or a fruit tree.”

Livingood urged Hemrich to simplify the bookmaking process as much as possible. She set length limits for poems, gave strict deadlines to the poets to send in their work, and uploaded the designed manuscript to Lulu.com, which produces paperback books within a week. Spaar mailed copies to alumni in June. “Modern printing is changing quickly,” Livingood says. “Affordable, print-on-demand sites allow for students to create books with highly tailored design.”

Quince's glossy cover features an abstract painting by Hemrich, who is a double major in English and studio art. “Poetry and visual art are deeply tied for me. Many of my paintings incorporate textual fragments and poetry,” she says. By placing the poems in alphabetical order by surname in the anthology, Hemrich created pairings of students from different class years whose poems speak to one another, almost eerily at times, from facing pages. Elisabeth Burkhalter’s (’14) poem, “In Sickness and Health and sub-Saharan Excess,” faces Libby Burton’s (’06) poem with a similar theme, “A Brief History of Hysteria.” Michael Rutherglen’s (’06) “Library of Babel” is across from Jesse Saldana’s (’12) “A List of Facts.” Claire Skinner’s (’09) poem, “Laura at the Drive-thru” pairs with Trent Smith’s (’13) poem, “Drive-In.”

“That’s the beautiful thing–the role that chance plays,” Spaar says, mentioning that the coincidences remind her of surrealist writing prompts she sometimes uses in workshops. “There’s the role of chance here, but it’s also because these poems are coming out of people who are paying close attention to the world. Henry James’ advice to a young writer was, ‘Try to be one of the people on whom nothing is lost.’”

Lisa Russ Spaar, Professor of English and founder and director of the APPW
Lisa Russ Spaar, Professor of English and founder and director of the APPW
Dan Addison / University Communications

Spaar, who began teaching full-time the creative writing department in 1995, started envisioning an area program for undergraduate poets in 2000. The Department of English launched the APPW in 2002. Spaar says she was inspired to create the program in part based on her own experience as a UVA undergraduate: she was in the first class of students in the English department’s Modern Studies area program, where the small group size “allowed students to feel like they are seen and their voices heard."

The APPW admits 10 rising third-year English majors each year. During their two years in the program, students take workshops and seminars taught by Spaar and the rest of UVA’s poetry faculty—Rita Dove, Debra Nystrom, Greg Orr and Paul Guest. As fourth years, the class of 10 takes part in year-long Capstone project, culminating in the writing of poetry manuscripts.

“In the APPW, peers and professors expect each other to be trying all the time to try harder, to experiment with new modes and voices, which means experimenting with new ways of thinking, which means challenging our preconceptions about art and of ourselves. If taken fully to heart, that kind of challenge is one of the greatest learning experiences a person can have,” says Sarah Schweig (’07), whose first full-length book of poems, Take Nothing with You, was published by the University of Iowa Press in late 2016. “In life outside the university, I think we find ourselves constantly challenged in this way … We are met with the raw experiences of the world, which can seem indecipherable or unfathomable. We can either shrink from that challenge or meet it and try to understand and articulate it.”

About a dozen APPW alumni have published books of poetry and many more have published poems in literary journals. Several work as creative writing professors, others are pursuing MFA degrees in creative writing or doctorates in English. Schweig works in New York as a staff writer for the animal rights website The Dodo and is pursuing a master’s degree in philosophy from The New School for Social Research on the side. But plenty of APPW alumni work in fields that seemingly have little to do with poetry—for example, one alum is a doctor, another is a banker, another a minister—which, Spaar says, makes her “glad.”

“When we founded the APPW we weren’t trying to create a stable of people who would become poets, necessarily, or identify themselves as poets … But, if you’re writing, you’re paying attention to everything—the past, the present, what might come,” Spaar says. “Poetry requires that you think in terms of complexity, layers … You see how language can create and shape reality—the power of that and the dangers of that, and the joy of that. Whether you go on to work on Wall Street, or you’re writing screenplays in LA, or you’re raising children—being able to engage with language in that way is going to make you a fuller human being and a more open-minded human being. And we need that now more than ever.”

The APPW anthology is available on lulu.com and through UVA Library. Spaar says she plans to create another in five years, with a new student designing and editing the book. “That way, she says, “after all the work she’s put into this project, Kirsten will be an alumna and we can include her poem!”


Sarah Schweig’s poem from Quince, the APPW alumni anthology
 

THEORY OF ASH
 

Behold the THEORY OF ASH!
shouts the woman in the public square
whose face is a carnival mask.
Some spectacle is surely about to take place.

What will you do when your mother is dead?
What will you do when your mother is dead and you come
face to face with the woman whose face is a carnival mask?
The Man of Good Questions asked.

What could I say to The Man of Good Questions?
I lay down with the Injured Thing in the grass.
And that’s when the crowd gathered. They gathered
in refutation of all refutations. They gathered in the absence of

anything else. What is the meaning of the THEORY OF ASH?
The Man of Good Questions is asking now. (Ascending the stage
is the woman whose face is a carnival mask.) I don’t know, I tell him.
I cannot even begin to describe the beauty of what is about to happen.

—Sarah V. Schweig
 

*This poem was first published on the literary blog HTMLGiant.