Today atAll Things Considered , we continue a project we're calling NewsPoet. Each month, we bring in a poet to spend time in the newsroom — and at the end of the day, to compose a poem reflecting on the day's stories.
The series has included Pulitzer Prize winner
Tracy K. Smith
as well as
Craig Morgan Teicher
,
Kevin Young
and
Monica Youn.
Today, poet Carmen Gimenez Smith brings us the news in verse. She is the editor-in-chief of the literary journalPuerto del Sol and the publisher of Noemi Press. Her poetry collections includeGoodbye, Flicker; The City She Was; andOdalisque in Pieces. She is also the author of the memoirBring Down the Little Birds, and she teaches creative writing at New Mexico State University.
Carmen Gimenez Smith sat down with Audie Cornish to talk about her day spent with NPR's All Things Considered. She told Cornish that she was preoccupied with the death of Bee Gees member Robin Gibb. "I came in with that in mind," she said.
After observing the morning news meeting, Smith immersed herself in the stories that would air on All Things Considered — many were still in their planning stages.
Much of Smith's own planning was in figuring out what kind of poem to write — eventually settling on an elegy. "I decided to use Frank O'Hara's poem " The Day Lady Died" as a backdrop for the other work that I wanted to get done in the poem," Smith explained.
In order to do that, she examined the O'Hara poem closely. "I thought about the sentences and the music of it," she said, "and I applied the language and the ideas that I heard in the newsroom." In combining the different news items of the day, Smith joked — "I made them into a little mutant."
When asked if the process was difficult, Smith said that starting was the hardest part. "I just worked on the first stanza over and over again, and got a rhythm and a music going." After that, the rest came more easily.
It helped to have the O'Hara poem to work from. "The energy and the themes guided me," Smith said.
All Things Considered' sNewsPoet is produced and edited by Ellen Silva with production assistance from Rose Friedman.
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