James Langer

b. 1973

Biographie

Born in Kitchener, ON, but raised in Heart’s Desire, Trinity Bay, NL, James Langer is the author of Gun Dogs (Anansi), which won The Gerald Lampert Memorial Award. In 2013, he co-edited The Breakwater Book of Contemporary Newfoundland Poetry. He has written both formal and free verse and hybrids of the two. His primary influences have been Seamus Heaney and Les Murray though he cites many authors as influences: Robert Frost, Elizabeth Bishop, Derek Walcott, Carol Ann Duffy, and Alice Oswald, among others. He earned his master’s degree in English from the University of New Brunswick in 2006 and has taught creative writing at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He lives in St. John’s.

Entrevue

Lisiez-vous de la poésie quand vous étiez à l'école ? Y a-t-il un poème en particulier dont vous vous souvenez ?

Yes, I started reading poetry in high school when a teacher introduced me to the work of Robert Frost. But I read it secretly, preferring to be viewed by my peers as an athlete rather than a bookworm. I grew up in rural Newfoundland on the outskirts of a tiny, struggling fishing community, and Frost’s “Birches” really made an impression on me. In that poem, the boy is too far from town to learn baseball, has to fetch the cows and make up his own games. That was me, except I went out and in to fetch a horse. I still remember where I was the first time I read that poem.   

Quand avez-vous commencé à écrire de la poésie ? Et quand avez-vous commencé à vous considérer poète ?

I didn’t write my first poem until I was twenty-one, and it was wretched. But even twenty-some-odd years later, I rarely think of myself as a poet. Way too much baggage, and I’m suspicious of the posture. So I figure I’m only a poet when I’m writing poetry.

Comment voyez-vous le « travail » des poètes ?

To make tiny machines with words. Tiny machines to merge head and heart in a sustained event that passes. 

Si vous avez un poème dans notre anthologie, qu’est-ce qui vous a inspiré lors de son écriture ?

Watching things change to remain the same.

Si vous deviez choisir un poème à mémoriser dans notre anthologie, lequel serait-ce ?

Elizabeth Bishop’s “One Art.” Because you get to remember the line “The art of losing isn’t hard to master.” And because the rhymes are mnemonic devices, so it’s easier. And because, full disclosure, I’ve always had a crush on Elizabeth Bishop. In love with the way her mind works.

Publications

Titre(s) du ou des poème(s)
"As SpongeBob SquarePants"
Titre
Arc
Maison d'édition
Arc
Date
Summer 2016
Type de publication
Périodique/revue
Titre(s) du ou des poème(s)
"St. John's Burns Down for the Umpteenth Time"
Titre
Best Canadian Poems 2015
Maison d'édition
Tightrope
Sous la direction de
Jacob McArthur Mooney
Date
2015
Type de publication
Anthologie
Titre
Gun Dogs
Maison d'édition
Anansi
Date
2009
Type de publication
Recueil
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