In three weeks my cousin Pat is going to take a small step into the vast unknown. Pat Riviere-Seel is going to spend a week at the NC Zoological Park in Asheboro as its first Poet-in-Residence. She and I have been whispering and tittering (in the email sense) about her preparations almost daily because just a few weeks after her sojourn ends I am going to follow her in the same role. And yes, before you ask, the curators have promised fresh straw in our cages.
How does one qualify to become a Zoo Poet? The decision process of the artistic committee that established this new program remains obscure to us, the selected, but I can tell you a little about Pat’s qualifications as a poet. She has the ability to imagine herself into unimaginable personalities. She can speak in the voices of the voiceless . . . so many voices. To read her poetry is to be touched, mind and heart, by people you could never otherwise have known.
Perhaps some of this creative skill has grown from her affliction, as she describes it, of “recovering journalist.” In the thousands of interviews and articles over the years, how many personalities consumed her? How many epiphanies when she suddenly saw with another person’s eyes and felt the whole of their motivations? In her book The Serial Killer’s Daughter, Pat has completed the astonishing transition from journalist to poet. Through the poems speak not only the daughter and mother, but other family members, victims, onlookers. The story as it unfolds, and as the daughter begins to suspect, gives me a chill every time I read it. It can’t be easy to weave together fear and desperation with calculating cruelty and still leave the reader with a sense of compassion, but my cousin Pat is someone ever willing to take a step into the vast unknown.
. . . . .
My Brother’s Keeper
My brother doesn’t believe me
when I tell him it’s no accident
everyone close to Mama dies.
Always Mama’s favorite, he’s
the smart one, college degree,
office job. He can’t afford
a stain of doubt ringing
the collar of his starched
life. How could he forget
what happened when
he enlisted: Mama declared
the Army wouldn’t take him,
a widow’s only son. Two weeks
she railed like a street preacher
calling to the lost. My brother claimed
Mama’s grief soured his stomach.
It’s nothing, he told me. Just the stress
from seeing Mama so upset.
He forced himself to eat with us
the day before he left. No cake,
he said to me. But Mama insisted.
Clumsy, she screeched
as I slipped
and the cake shattered.
© Pat Riviere-Seel, The Serial-Killer’s Daughter, 2009, Main Street Rag Publishing Company. Additional sample poems at Pat’s homepage.
. . . . .
Yes, Pat and I are really cousins. Her great-grandfather, the Reverend J.N.S. Daub, is also my mother’s great-grandfather. That makes us second cousins one generation removed. (Your attention please: due to the vagaries of genealogical arithmetic, this does not mean that Pat is old enough to be my mother.) We discovered this connection only about ten years ago when we met at an NCPS meeting and she mentioned that she’d just attended a family reunion in Lewisville. I said, “Hey, that’s where my great-great-grandfather is buried,” then later mailed her a photo I’d taken of the headstone. Cosmic!
And as far as her being selected as Zoo Poet, I also happen to know that Pat has written a number of poems about bears.
The Poets-in-Residence will be offering adult and youth workshops during our weeks with the animals. For more information about Pat, me, and the third Zoo Poet Michael Beadle follow these links!
. . . . .
Bill,
Wonderful article about Pat. Thanks for sharing your talent. Always enjoy your work.
Ed Seel
LikeLike
Thanks, Ed — hope to see you at the zoo in July!
LikeLike
How wonderful to read this story of connectedness between poets. The upcoming adventure of being a zoo poet is fascinating. Can’t wait to read and hear more. Pat is a wonderful poet and teacher. What will be her experience among the lions, tigers and bears?
LikeLike
An adventure indeed! To be the poet of beak and claw, feather and fur, chitin and scale . . . what voices are waiting for you there, Pat!
LikeLike
Beautiful poem, Pat. I remember it well. I know you will love living with the animals! Say hey to the polar bears for me. If I can figure out how to do Asheville on the way home from Weymouth, perhaps a visit? See you soon!
LikeLike
Thanks for visiting, Marjorie. We hope to post more zoo happenings here in the coming months.
LikeLike
Congratulations to both of you! What a cool gig.
LikeLike
Come see us at the Zoo!
LikeLike
Sounds like fun. Not only is Pat a fun and descriptive poet but an involved and wonderful teacher. Hope you Zoo poets enjoy your time, I am sure that those who attend your workshops will and I bet the animals like you too.
Kathy Weisfeld
LikeLike
I love the whole concept, and thanks for posting this poem with its zinger ending. As Paul Simon knew, it’s all happening at the zoo.
LikeLike
This is fascinating! Loved reading Pat’s poem and Wendall Berry’s poem again. It’s always a great joy to reread favorite poems.
I know Pat is reading in Charleston this week. We both read for Piccolo Spoleto. Wish I could have heard her. She writes and reads such lovely work.
Thanks, Bill, for this feature and all the zoo news. Hope to hear more about it.
I love wolves. Are there any there?
Diana
LikeLike
Congrats to Pat–a wonderful teacher and a wonderful poet.
LikeLike