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Writers and Writing

Conversation With Pulitzer Winner Lou Simpson


Article # : 10818 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 7 / 1986  2,497 Words
Author : Kate Hancock

       This conversation with Louis Simpson, a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, took place at the Brockport Writers Forum in Brockport, New York, during the summer of 1984. The interviewer, Al Poulin, Jr., is a writer and former director of the forum.
       
        Al Poulin, Jr.: Welcome back to the Brockport Writers Forum, Louis. Since the last time we talked you've published four more books of poems: Searching for the Ox (1976), Caviar at the Funeral (1980), People Live Here: Selected Poems 1949-1983 (1983), as well as The Best Hour of the Night (1983). What kinds of ideas do you think you've resolved in the course of the last ten years and four books?
       
        Louis Simpson: I've always written narrative poetry, but I think that in the last eight years or so I concentrated on writing a narrative of contemporary life. Along with the poems about life in the old country, Russia, I've developed a poem like "Physical Universe" that is able to talk about putting out the garbage. It's taken me quite a long time to develop the voice and style in which to do that, but I think that in this book, for the first time, it's quite clear. It's always been present for critics to see if they wished to, but this time it insists on being seen. And, quite evidently, it's striking people.
       
        Poulin: You don't think there's been that kind of drastic change from book to book as there was in your earlier work?
       
        Simpson: No. There was a very drastic change, as you know, from A Dream of Governors in 1959 to At the End of the Open Road in 1963, but the poem about contemporary life has developed in the last few years, and I've been able to see more clearly what I have to concentrate on in the future. I write best when I write about the contemporary world and tell stories about it.
       
        Poulin: In our last conversation we also spent a considerable amount of time discussing your wrestling with Whitman's vision of America. Am I right in assuming that in your more recent work you've been moving away from that concern?
       
        Simpson: Whitman was dealing in very general terms--with symbolic ideas. In my more recent poetry, I'm telling specific stories that show something more about life and character than Whitman ever tried to do. He wasn't very interested in that kind of thing. He has little bits of narrative, but he doesn't ever attempt to do a complete
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