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Diane Seuss

Visiting Poet

Diane Suess headshot. Photo credit: Gabrielle Montesanti

In a 2018 review of Diane Seuss’s Still Life With Two Dead Peacocks and a Girl (Graywolf Press, 2018), Victoria Chang writes that Seuss’s poems “aspire to complicate, drawing connections between unrelated things, flowing in and out and back and away from their initial triggers.” It is this matchless skill for synthesizing apparently disparate images and tones that allows Seuss to seek out a space “where the possible anoints the forehead / of the impossible.” Seuss is the author of five collections of poetry, including the breathtakingly vibrant frank: sonnets (Graywolf, 2021) and Four-Legged Girl (Graywolf, 2015), a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. She served as the MacLean Distinguished Visiting Professor in the English department at Colorado College in 2012, and is Professor Emerita of Kalamazoo College, where she taught from 1988-2016. Seuss was raised in rural Michigan, which she continues to call home.

Select Poems

Marry dull. Those who retain full access to their imaginations are crosshatched

bitches. They may look good from a certain angle, wearing a tight black slip

as a skin with their furry legs dangling out the bottom and cornflower boots

that originated at some defunct box store and were donated with the soles worn

thin and then stolen—stolen—from a St. Vincent de Paul while a defrocked nun

had her back turned fumigating bras for resale. Don’t marry that. Its boots all

jingle-jangle. It’s not going to loan out its rain hat. Or adopt a calf. I learned to read

at age three. Used a toilet plunger to suck ants out of their holes. One doll danced,

another spoke in tongues. What do you want from me? If you rotate me like a jewel

you will locate the flaw that runs all the way through like a pulsing vein of gold

that brings in the fat-cat colonizers who ruin everything that came before. The fish.

The birds. The actual human people. Don’t marry that. Go for something with half

of an imagination. Half or a fourth. Like Mikel instructed about his ashes: A fourth

to his mother. A fourth to me. I disobeyed, slit the phony box and set all of him free.

—from frank: sonnets (Graywolf Press, 2021)

I hope when it happens I have time to say oh so this is how it is happening

unlike Frank hit by a jeep on Fire Island but not like dad who knew too

long six goddamn years in a young man’s life so long it made a sweet guy sarcastic

I want enough time to say oh so this is how I’ll go and smirk at that last rhyme

I rhymed at times because I wanted to make something pretty especially for Mikel

who liked pretty things soft and small things who cried into a white towel when I hurt

myself when it happens I don’t want to be afraid I want to be curious was Mikel curious

I’m afraid by then he was only sad he had no money left was living on green oranges

had kissed all his friends goodbye I kissed lips that kissed Frank’s lips though not

for me a willing kiss I willingly kissed lips that kissed Howard’s deathbed lips

I happily kissed lips that kissed lips that kissed Basquiat’s lips I know a man who said

he kissed lips that kissed lips that kissed lips that kissed lips that kissed Whitman’s

lips who will say of me I kissed her who will say of me I kissed someone who kissed

her or I kissed someone who kissed someone who kissed someone who kissed her.

—from frank: sonnets (Graywolf Press, 2021)

About Diane


Poetry Center Reading Dates: March 2021