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Featured on Feb 21, 2004
Poets have a lot of latitude when it comes to the role they play in a
culture. They can chronicle or comment, entertain or enlighten or simply
bear witness to the slice of time they occupy. Jerry Martien does all
these things. An environmental and political activist in the Humboldt
Region of Northern California for thirty years, he has labored as a carpenter,
editor, teacher and board member of several organizations. He has taught
creative writing and nature writing for the past seven years at Humboldt
State University. His published work includes Shell Game,
described as A True Account of Beads and Money in North America, and a
collection of poetry, Pieces in Place.
Pieces in Place is a collection of poems that are best
described in the opening lines of Martien's essay, "A Defense of Poetry
(Is a Defense of Place:)"
"The poem arises from the ground of its making. By way of a human attention,
deliberately placed there-- held there, till it is shaped by the rule
of that ground. ... The poem surrounds us. The poet loiters deliberately
in the dooryard, maintaining cultural access to that nourishing circumstance.
Speaks on behalf of the still-living, still sacred grove, and labors to
restore the springs to which we all go when thirsty."
Please welcome Jerry Martien
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