Poetry for Students

(Rick Simeone) #1

108 Poetry for Students


[Christina Vick]: When did you first conceive
a love for literature?
[Dana Gioia]: I can’t ever remember a time
when I did not love poems and stories, but who
knows how it all began? Oddly, I don’t recall my
parents ever reading books to me, but my mother
often read or recited poems. I remember hearing
hundreds of poems as a child. As soon as I learned
to read, I devoured books. We had—because of po-
litical graft—an enormous library in my otherwise
rundown hometown. I used to go there after school
and wander the shelves. No one ever advised me
on what to read, so I sampled everything. On the
same visit I might bring home a book of Roman
history, another of horror stories, and a third of Ital-
ian paintings. Reading was in many ways more real
to me than my daily life. It opened up a world of
possibilities beyond the dreary limits of working-
class, urban Los Angeles.
Were there any special circumstances in your
childhood that made books so important to you?
I spent a great deal of time alone. Both of my
parents worked. My first brother wasn’t born until
I was six, and except for my cousins next door there

were almost no children in my neighborhood,
which was made up mostly of small cheap apart-
ments. Our home, however, was full of books,
records, and musical scores from my uncle,
Theodore Ortiz, who had served in the Merchant
Marines before dying in a plane crash in 1955. He
was an old-style proletariat intellectual who spent
all of his money on music and literature. His library
lined nearly every room and spilled over into the
garage. There were books in six languages and hun-
dreds of classical LPs. My parents never read the
books or played the records, but they kept them for
sentimental reasons. The books were not especially
interesting to a child—the novels of Thomas Mann,
the plays of George Bernard Shaw, Pushkin in
Russian, Cervantes in Spanish—but growing up
with this large library around us exercised a strong
magic on me, and later on me brother Ted.
At what point in your life did you know that
you wanted to be a poet?
I remember quite exactly when I decided to be-
come a poet. I was a college sophomore studying
in Vienna on a Stanford exchange program. I had
gone to Europe as a decisive gesture to figure out
if I really wanted to be a composer. Living abroad
for the first time and speaking a foreign language,
I brooded a great deal in my room or else wandered
the labyrinthine streets of the inner city in a fever
of loneliness. Soon I found myself constantly read-
ing and writing poetry—both in English and Ger-
man. By the time I returned to America, I had
decided to be a poet.
Who or what do you read for pleasure or in-
spiration?
I read all the time—newspapers, magazines,
journals, and books—usually several books at once.
I don’t read as many novels now as I did when I was
younger, though I still read forty or fifty a year. Now
I tend to read more biographies and history. I also
read theological and philosophical books. And, of
course, I read—and reread—poetry all the time.
I find myself habitually rereading certain books and
authors, especially Virgil, Horace, St. Augustine,
Shakespeare, and the Bible. I read science fiction for
fun at bedtime. I also devour classical music and
opera magazines. I sometimes worry if I have spent
too much of my life reading, but how much narrower
my life would have been without books.
Who are your favorite authors?
I have too many to list, especially poets. Some
of my favorite novelists include Stendhal, Balzac,
James, Cather, and Nabokov. I have a special pas-
sion for the short story, which seems to me perhaps

The Litany

What


Do I Read


Next?



  • A Death in the Family(1957), by James Agee,
    is a tragic tale of the effect of a man’s death on
    his family.

  • For a comparative study of American poetry,
    read Richard Howard’s Alone with America: Es-
    says on the Art of Poetry in the United States
    since 1950(1980).

  • Gioia dedicated The Gods of Winter(1991) to
    his son who died from sudden infant death syn-
    drome. Several of the poems in the volume deal
    with the subject of death.

  • Gioia’s essay “Can Poetry Matter?,” published
    in Can Poetry Matter?: Essays on Poetry and
    American Culture(2002), presents his contro-
    versial views of the status of poetry in America
    in the early part of the twenty-first century.

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