TDR Letter
Subject: TDR's interview with Paul Vermeersch
Dear Editor,
I happen to be a Paul Vermeersch fan. He's a great
writer, and my kids will
probably study his works in school.
Whenever Paul gets interviewed by somebody I always
read it because he is so
funny about the cultural wasteland that was his
childhood home. But mullets
and bingo halls are not just found in large quantities
throughout Sarnia,
I'm afraid. You want mullets? Come to Hanover. Women
and men sport them
here. There are so many towns in this country where the
mullet, as well as
monster trucks, wrestling and car racing, and Budweiser
tank tops and mesh
backed ball caps are king. But in these rural areas
we've also got those
long strands of bulrushes growing everywhere that Paul
has written about.
We've got rolling farm land, and the hard-working,
occasionally troubled,
occasionally colourful, but always fascinating families
who live and work
those lands, too. Those are the kinds of things that
seep into Paul's work
every now and then and have inspired some of, what I
consider to be his best
poems. Read Rural Elementary or The Skaggs Boys and you
will laugh, but
there is so much pain there, too, in what he is
bringing to light. That is
small town life - complex, and not placid or peaceful,
really at all, if you
get beneath the surface, which is what any good poem
should do.
And what is it that they say about farming folk? That
the best, most concise
and clever writers cannot write as well as the farmer
speaks. There is a lot
of truth in that. And that is where Paul comes from,
too.
Love your publication,
Sincerely,
Kathleen Lippa
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