TDR
Interview: Alex Boyd
by
Dani Couture
[November 2008]
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The The last
time we met in this capacity was five years ago when I.V. Lounge
was celebrating it's fifth anniversary, and you were taking over the
series from Paul Vermeersch. On May 9th, I.V. celebrated its tenth
anniversary. What kept you motivated to continue hosting the series five
years later?
The series was a pleasure to do, it
didn’t feel like work. Writing can be a bit of a lonely, internal
process and the I.V. Lounge had warmth to spare, it was a safe place to
present work and see colleagues and friends. Quincy is a poet-cat if
I've ever met one. When I first took over from Paul I found it
nerve-wracking, Paul was used to getting up there and hosting after five
years of it but I wasn’t (and maybe poets and writers could be
described as a species of watchers, but that's a whole other question).
At first, I forced myself to make a lot of rehearsed jokes that fell
flat. After I’d been there a while I became much more natural, and of
course, you’re funnier as soon as you’re not trying so hard. As an
added benefit I'm a lot more comfortable getting up to do readings of my
own work.
The I.V. Lounge Reading Series came to
an abrupt end this summer. Can you talk about how the series ended and
the series' legacy in Toronto, and even outside of the city? I imagine
the anthology you edited recently, The I.V. Lounge Reading Series came to
an abrupt end this summer. Can you talk about how the series ended and
the series' legacy in Toronto, and even outside of the city? I imagine
the anthology you edited recently, I.V.
Lounge Nights, must mean a great deal more to you now that the
series is over.
We were lucky to have ten years with
Kevin Jones managing, and no major changes or renovations, and then
suddenly it all happened at once – a manager ready to move on, an
owner interested in serious renovations. As far as an influence, in the
last few years I’ve seen a new trend in readings, which is for events
to skip the open stage in favour of a more professional evening, as well
as mix fiction and poetry, established and emerging authors. I hope the
long run of the I.V. series has had something to do with that. And you’re
right, the anthology does mean more now than I ever thought it could, it’s
a permanent record of what the series was all about, and promotes 29
different writers. I’m glad Myna Wallin came up with the idea, I seem
to recall I was only mulling over the idea of a chapbook with ten
writers in it, for the tenth anniversary. How were we to know the series
would end a few months after the anniversary? After ten years, I
took the series a little bit for granted as much as anyone else, and was
saddened when it ended.
Since the I.V. Lounge shut its doors in
August, you have been busy behind the scenes, helping to set up a new
reading series. Who will be the host and what, if any, will be your
involvement in the series?
Carey Toane is someone I thought was
cool and professional whenever we chatted in the last few months of the
series, and she was booked to read right before the bar suddenly closed.
I emailed her about having to cancel her reading – I had to cancel
four months of readings – and she commented it was a loss to the
literary scene in Toronto, so I asked if she wanted to host a new
series. My initial reaction was to carry on and do a whole new series
myself, but I’d started to admit to myself that after five years I was
ready to hand it over to someone else. And really, people shouldn’t
stay entrenched in a position for too long, it’s good for fresh energy
to take over. Carey will do an excellent job, and already has a blog for
the series at pivotreadings.wordpress.com
that people should check out, and Pivot Readings is meant as a nod to
the original series, with the "IV" embedded in the name.
What are you going to do with your
Friday nights now?
I might occasionally host the new
series when Carey needs the help – though it is a Wednesday night
series – but generally I’m left with more time for other projects.
Your first book, Making Bones Walk, won
the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award in 2008. In addition to your projects
-- Your first book, Making Bones Walk, won
the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award in 2008. In addition to your projects
-- BOYDblog,
Digital Popcorn, and co-editing Northern
Poetry Review -- how do you find time to write?
As far as my own writing is concerned,
I always feel like I’m walking into a kitchen where I’m cooking five
different meals. I post occasional film reviews to digitalpopcorn.wordpress.com,
I’ve got a first novel finished, and then there’s always poetry,
occasional book reviews and essays. Of course, Northern Poetry Review is
a team effort and a richer site thanks to more than two years of work
you’ve put into it, thank you. The novel is the most awkward,
unmanageable thing to work on, and I just have to chip away at it. With
poetry, I’m often waiting for it to commit to me rather than force it,
and it’s easier to stay on top of rewriting poems. Of course, there
are also those rare poems that seem to arrive almost fully formed and
feel like a blessing, it’s like panning for gold and finding a brick.
Everything proceeds slowly. I don’t resent having to work, I like
being in the so-called "real" world, and feel it keeps me
grounded. And yet, I’m often annoyed it takes up so much energy and
find I’m in the same environments too much. I’ve written two rush
hour poems, and I think you only need one, at most. Maybe that’s how I’ll
spend my Friday nights – deleting rush hour poems.
Dani Couture is the author of "Good Meat" from Pedlar Press, and "The Handbook"
is forthcoming.
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