Authors: Erika Meitner
N
OTES
The title
Copia
was taken from photographer Brian Ulrich's photography project of the same name (
notifbutwhen.com
).
“Retail Space Available” and “Ghostbox” were based on interviews with photographer Brian Ulrich, about his experiences photographing sites for his project
Dark Stores, Ghost Boxes, and Dead Malls
.
“with/out” is after Janice N. Harrington's poem “Heat,” from her book
Even the Hollow My Body Made Is Gone
(BOA Editions, 2007).
Both “Niagara” poems are based on images from the photo series of the same name, by Alec Soth (
alecsoth.com/photography/projects/niagra/
), as well as interviews with the photographer about his experiences on the project.
Some of the phrases in “Let the future begin this way:” were taken from photographer Danny Lyon's book
Pictures from the New World
(Aperture, 1988) and
The New American Ghetto
by photographer Camilo José Vergara (Rutgers University Press, 1997). The last four lines are from Romans 10:15.
The Yiddish lines in “Yiddishland” come from
Di folks-shprakh
, by Y. Klepfish (Warsaw: Farlag “Progress,” 1909â1910) as cited in
Adventures in Yiddishland
by Jeffrey Shandler (University of California Press, 2006).
“To Whom It May Concern:” contains language from an NPR story by Daniel Zwerdling, called “A Bright Spot of Life on the Icy Continent” (March 15, 2008).
“The Book of Dissolution” was inspired by James Griffioen's photographs and account of his explorations of the former Detroit Public Schools Book Depository/Roosevelt Warehouse, as recounted on his blog (
www.sweet-juniper.com
).
“Post-Industrialization,” “All That Blue Fire,” “Outside the Abandoned Packard Plant,” “And After the Ark,” “Inside the Frame,” “Outside the Frame,” and “Borderama” were commissioned by
Virginia Quarterly Review
for the Spring 2011 issue, entitled
Ruin & Rebirth
. These documentary poems resulted from a reporting trip to Detroit with Jesse
Dukes and Kate Ringo in August 2010, and would not exist had it not been for their hard work on the project, and the support of Ted Genoways. There are many other Detroit residents who gave us their time, stories, and expertise, for which I'm grateful: Dan Austin, Terry Blackhawk, Alvin Brewer, Delores Casey, Arnold Collens, Sean Doerr, Wendy Ford, Oren Goldenberg, Vicki Hooks Green, Lolita Hernandez, Jerry Herron, Greg Lenhoff, Andy Linn, Emily Linn, Peter Markus, Joan Nash, Suzanne Scarfone, Nick Tobier, Stuart Trager, and Shar Willis.
“Porto, Portare, Portavi, Portatus” contains lines from John 16:12, Acts 7:43, 1 Timothy 6:7, Genesis 18:12, and Luke 7:14.
A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am grateful to all the editors of the following journals and anthologies where these poems, sometimes in different form, first appeared:
AGNI
: “The Book of Dissolution,” “Niagara”;
Anti-
: “with/out”;
Cave Wall
: “Ars Poetica with Radio Apparatus, Toddler, & Ducks”;
Cellpoems
: “And the moon”;
Crab Orchard Review
: “Maple Ridge”;
Gulf Coast
: “Staking a Claim”;
Handsome
: “Interrobang,” “Retail Space Available”;
The Ilanot Review
: “You return the Torah to the ark,” “By Other Means”;
Indiana Review
: “Niagara,” “Yiddishland”;
jubilat
: “Let the future begin this way:”;
Ninth Letter
: “Terra Nullius”;
Painted Bride Quarterly
: “Inconsequential Alchemy”;
Ploughshares
: “Porto, Portare, Portavi, Portatus”;
Plume
: “And After the Ark,” “Apologetics”;
River Styx
: “Snowpocalypse”;
The Rumpus
: “Walmart Supercenter”;
Salt Hill
: “Ghostbox”;
Slate.com
: “Big Box Encounter”;
The Southern Review
: “The Language of Happiness,” “Correspondence,” “In/exhaustible”;
Sou'wester
: “Maple Ridge”;
Subtropics
: “To Whom It May Concern”;
Tin House
: “Terra Nullius”;
Virginia Quarterly Review
: “Post-Industrialization,” “All That Blue Fire,” “Borderama,” “Outside the Abandoned Packard Plant,” “Inside the Frame,” “Outside the Frame”;
Waccamaw
: “The Architecture of Memory”;
Whiskey Island
: “One Version of December.”
“Litany of our Radical Engagement with the Material World” was first published in
Alhambra Poetry Calendar 2011
.
“Untitled [and the moon]” was first published on the Academy of American Poets website.
“Yizker Bukh” was first published on
The Chronicle of Higher Education
“Arts & Academe” blog, and reprinted in
The Hide-and-Seek Muse: Annotations of Contemporary Poetry
, Ed. Lisa Russ Spaar (Drunken Boat Media, 2013).
“Yiddishland” was reprinted in
The Bloomsbury Anthology of Contemporary Jewish American Poetry
, Eds. Matthew Silverman and Deborah Ager (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013).
Many thanks to Virginia Tech (in particular, the Department of English, and the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences) and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, for time and space and support. I'm grateful to the Child Development Center for Learning and Research (CDCLR) at Virginia Tech, and Rainbow Riders Childcare Center, for joyfully teaching and tending to my children, which allowed me to write this book. I am also indebted to agent extraordinaire Nat Jacks at Inkwell Management, and the poets who helped me with this manuscript in its various stages: Sandra Beasley, Mary Biddinger, Jehanne Dubrow, Tom Gardner, Joy Katz, David Stack, Susan Somers-Willett, and Rachel Zuckerâtheir big hearts and eagle eyes. Peter Conners and the fine folks at BOA Editions, Ltd. are the tops.
And always, Steve Trostâlove, lynchpin, lyre, lookout.
A
BOUT THE
A
UTHOR
Erika Meitner's first collection of poems,
Inventory at the All-Night Drugstore
, won the 2002 Anhinga-Robert Dana Prize for Poetry from Anhinga Press. Her second collection,
Ideal Cities
, was a winner of the 2009 National Poetry Series Award and was published by HarperCollins in 2010. Her next book,
Makeshift Instructions for Vigilant Girls
, was published by Anhinga Press in 2011. She is a graduate of Dartmouth College and the MFA program at the University of Virginia, where she was a Henry Hoyns Fellow, and also earned an M.A. in Religion as a Morgenstern Fellow in Jewish Studies. Her work has appeared in
American Poetry Review
,
The Best American Poetry 2011
,
Gulf Coast
,
Ploughshares
,
Best African American Essays 2010
,
Tin House
, and
Prairie Schooner
, among other journals and anthologies. She is currently an associate professor of English at Virginia Tech, where she teaches in the MFA program.
BOA E
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, L
TD
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P
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C
ONTINUUM
S
ERIES
No.  1 | The Fuhrer Bunker: A Cycle of Poems in Progress W. D. Snodgrass |
No.  2 | She M. L. Rosenthal |
No.  3 | Living With Distance Ralph J. Mills, Jr. |
No.  4 | Not Just Any Death Michael Waters |
No.  5 | That Was Then: New and Selected Poems Isabella Gardner |
No.  6 | Things That Happen Where There Aren't Any People William Stafford |
No.  7 | The Bridge of Change: Poems 1974â1980 John Logan |
No.  8 | Signatures Joseph Stroud |
No.  9 | People Live Here: Selected Poems 1949â1983 Louis Simpson |
No.  10 | Yin Carolyn Kizer |
No.  11 | Duhamel: Ideas of Order in Little Canada Bill Tremblay |
No.  12 | Seeing It Was So Anthony Piccione |
No.  13 | Hyam Plutzik: The Collected Poems |
No.  14 | Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969â1980 Lucille Clifton |
No.  15 | Next: New Poems Lucille Clifton |
No.  16 | Roxa: Voices of the Culver Family William B. Patrick |
No.  17 | John Logan: The Collected Poems |
No.  18 | Isabella Gardner: The Collected Poems |
No.  19 | The Sunken Lightship Peter Makuck |
No.  20 | T Li-Young Lee |
No.  21 | Quilting: Poems 1987â1990 Lucille Clifton |
No.  22 | John Logan: The Collected Fiction |
No.  23 | Shenandoah and Other Verse Plays Delmore Schwartz |
No.  24 | Nobody Lives on Arthur Godfrey Boulevard Gerald Costanzo |
No.  25 | The Book of Names: New and Selected Poems Barton Sutter |
No.  26 | Each in His Season W. D. Snodgrass |
No.  27 | Wordworks: Poems Selected and New Richard Kostelanetz |
No.  28 | What We Carry Dorianne Laux |
No.  29 | Red Suitcase Naomi Shihab Nye |
No.  30 | Song Brigit Pegeen Kelly |
No.  31 | The Fuehrer Bunker: The Complete Cycle W. D. Snodgrass |
No.  32 | For the Kingdom Anthony Piccione |
No.  33 | The Quicken Tree Bill Knott |
No.  34 | These Upraised Hands William B. Patrick |
No.  35 | Crazy Horse in Stillness William Heyen |
No.  36 | Quick, Now, Always Mark Irwin |
No.  37 | I Have Tasted the Apple Mary Crow |
No.  38 | The Terrible Stories Lucille Clifton |
No.  39 | The Heat of Arrivals Ray Gonzalez |
No.  40 | Jimmy & Rita Kim Addonizio |
No.  41 | Green Ash, Red Maple, Black Gum Michael Waters |
No.  42 | Against Distance Peter Makuck |
No.  43 | The Night Path Laurie Kutchins |
No.  44 | Radiography Bruce Bond |
No.  45 | At My Ease: Uncollected Poems of the Fifties and Sixties David Ignatow |
No.  46 | Trillium Richard Foerster |
No.  47 | Fuel Naomi Shihab Nye |
No.  48 | Gratitude Sam Hamill |
No.  49 | Diana, Charles, & the Queen William Heyen |
No.  50 | Plus Shipping Bob Hicok |
No.  51 | Cabato Sentora Ray Gonzalez |
No.  52 | We Didn't Come Here for This William B. Patrick |
No.  53 | The Vandals Alan Michael Parker |
No.  54 | To Get Here Wendy Mnookin |
No.  55 | Living Is What I Wanted: Last Poems David Ignatow |
No.  56 | Dusty Ange Michael Blumenthal |
No.  57 | The Tiger Iris Joan Swift |
No.  58 | White City Mark Irwin |
No.  59 | Laugh at the End of the World: Collected Comic Poems 1969â1999 Bill Knott |
No.  60 | Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems: 1988â2000 Lucille Clifton |
No.  61 | Tell Me Kim Addonizio |
No.  62 | Smoke Dorianne Laux |
No.  63 | Parthenopi: New and Selected Poems Michael Waters |
No.  64 | Rancho Notorious Richard Garcia |
No.  65 | Jam Joe-Anne McLaughlin |
No.  66 | A. Poulin, Jr. Selected Poems Edited, with an Introduction by Michael Waters |
No.  67 | Small Gods of Grief Laure-Anne Bosselaar |
No.  68 | Book of My Nights Li-Young Lee |
No.  69 | Tulip Farms and Leper Colonies Charles Harper Webb |
No.  70 | Double Going Richard Foerster |
No.  71 | What He Took Wendy Mnookin |
No.  72 | The Hawk Temple at Tierra Grande Ray Gonzalez |
No.  73 | Mules of Love Ellen Bass |
No.  74 | The Guests at the Gate Anthony Piccione |
No.  75 | Dumb Luck Sam Hamill |
No.  76 | Love Song with Motor Vehicles Alan Michael Parker |
No.  77 | Life Watch Willis Barnstone |
No.  78 | The Owner of the House: New Collected Poems 1940â2001 Louis Simpson |
No.  79 | Is Wayne Dodd |
No.  80 | Late Cecilia Woloch |
No.  81 | Precipitates Debra Kang Dean |
No.  82 | The Orchard Brigit Pegeen Kelly |
No.  83 | Bright Hunger Mark Irwin |
No.  84 | Desire Lines: New and Selected Poems Lola Haskins |
No.  85 | Curious Conduct Jeanne Marie Beaumont |
No.  86 | Mercy Lucille Clifton |
No.  87 | Model Homes Wayne Koestenbaum |
No.  88 | Farewell to the Starlight in Whiskey Barton Sutter |
No.  89 | Angels for the Burning David Mura |
No.  90 | The Rooster's Wife Russell Edson |
No.  91 | American Children Jim Simmerman |
No.  92 | Postcards from the Interior Wyn Cooper |
No.  93 | You & Yours Naomi Shihab Nye |
No.  94 | Consideration of the Guitar: New and Selected Poems 1986â2005 Ray Gonzalez |
No.  95 | Off-Season in the Promised Land Peter Makuck |
No.  96 | The Hoopoe's Crown Jacqueline Osherow |
No.  97 | Not for Specialists: New and Selected Poems W. D. Snodgrass |
No.  98 | Splendor Steve Kronen |
No.  99 | Woman Crossing a Field Deena Linett |
No.  100 | The Burning of Troy Richard Foerster |
No.  101 | Darling Vulgarity Michael Waters |
No.  102 | The Persistence of Objects Richard Garcia |
No.  103 | Slope of the Child Everlasting Laurie Kutchins |
No.  104 | Broken Hallelujahs Sean Thomas Dougherty |
No.  105 | Peeping Tom's Cabin: Comic Verse 1928â2008 X. J. Kennedy |
No.  106 | Disclamor G.C. Waldrep |
No.  107 | Encouragement for a Man Falling to His Death Christopher Kennedy |
No.  108 | Sleeping with Houdini Nin Andrews |
No.  109 | Nomina Karen Volkman |
No.  110 | The Fortieth Day Kazim Ali |
No.  111 | Elephants & Butterflies Alan Michael Parker |
No.  112 | Voices Lucille Clifton |
No.  113 | The Moon Makes Its Own Plea Wendy Mnookin |
No.  114 | The Heaven-Sent Leaf Katy Lederer |
No.  115 | Struggling Times Louis Simpson |
No.  116 | And Michael Blumenthal |
No.  117 | Carpathia Cecilia Woloch |
No.  118 | Seasons of Lotus, Seasons of Bone Matthew Shenoda |
No.  119 | Sharp Stars Sharon Bryan |
No.  120 | Cool Auditor Ray Gonzalez |
No.  121 | Long Lens: New and Selected Poems Peter Makuck |
No.  122 | Chaos Is the New Calm Wyn Cooper |
No.  123 | Diwata Barbara Jane Reyes |
No.  124 | Burning of the Three Fires Jeanne Marie Beaumont |
No.  125 | Sasha Sings the Laundry on the Line Sean Thomas Dougherty |
No.  126 | Your Father on the Train of Ghosts G.C. Waldrep and John Gallaher |
No.  127 | Ennui Prophet Christopher Kennedy |
No.  128 | Transfer Naomi Shihab Nye |