Meghan Kemp-Gee

1985
Mention de source
Wade Andrew

Biographie

Meghan Kemp-Gee is the author of The Animal in the Room (Coach House Books, 2023) and Nebulas (forthcoming 2026), as well as the poetry chapbooks What I Meant to Ask, Things to Buy in New Brunswick, More, and The Bones and Eggs and Beets. She also co-created the graphic novel One More Year and co-edited the sports comics anthology Come Out and Play. She is currently a PhD candidate at the University of New Brunswick, where her dissertation focuses on sports literature and lyric poetry. 

Entrevue

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

I think the first "poetry" I read was song lyrics. I used to love buying CDs with all the lyrics in the liner notes, and I'd spend hours and hours studying them and rewriting them in my head. Some of my favourite lyricists when I was growing up were the Beatles, Alanis Morisette, Lauryn Hill, and Gord Downie.

When I was in high school, my wonderful English teacher showed me Margaret Atwood's book Power Politics. It's full of very short poems that are deceptively simple and accessible, but that unfold and open up into incredible depth. Like this one:

you fit into me
like a hook into an eye
 
a fish hook
an open eye
 

I'll always remember that poem. It blew my mind! I think that was the first poetry that got me interested in reading and writing seriously.

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

I always liked to do a little bit of casual writing when I was studying poetry at school. If we were studying Shakespeare, I liked to try writing a sonnet to try to figure it out. Or when I was in college and we read Elizabeth Bishop's "Sestina," I wanted to try a sestina, and when I learned about pantoums, I wanted to try those too! Today, I still like approaching poems like little puzzles and experiments, and I still love writing imitations of or responses to other poets.

Comment voyez-vous le « travail » des poètes ?

Dylan Thomas once said that “a good poem is a contribution to reality.” I like to think of my job that way! Even if you can make just a tiny little contribution -- if you can say something that's never been said before, or make someone think something they never have before -- you've done your job.

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

My poem "A Newly Discovered Species of Lizard with Distinctive Triangular Scales" is inspired by a real fact about famous 19th-century naturalist Charles Darwin. When he was at university he ran something called a "Glutton Club," where they ate unusual animals, including owls! There's something fabulously strange about that biographical detail, isn't there? Darwin's theory of natural selection forever changed the way we see the animal world... but he also set out to devour it!

The six-toed lizard in the poem is a fictional invention, but I like her. She's a monster mashup of reptile DNA and a six-fingered woman with deer eyes. I wanted to make the lizard into a survivor, or a monster that destroys whoever tries to catalogue, conquer, or consume her.

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

I'd like to learn Marianne Moore's "Poetry," because I think it would be awesome to hear that poem performed at a dinner party or (even better) around a summer campfire!

Featuring this poet

Publications

Titre
The Animal in the Room
Maison d'édition
Coach House Books
Date
2023
Type de publication
Recueil
Titre
What I Meant to Ask: A Chapbook
Maison d'édition
Alien Buddha Press
Date
2022
Type de publication
Recueil
Titre
Nebulas
Maison d'édition
Coach House Books
Date
2026
Type de publication
Recueil
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