The goal of life is happiness (Agnes Martin); the word happiness shares the root hap with happenstance, haphazard and, simply, happen. I once had a friend named Happy—we worked for years at a restaurant together, and once during a slow moment, he took my Maybelline eyeliner pencil—warm brown—and with that alone, made up my eyes, creating amazing nuances, subtleties, new depths and contours. Neither they nor I had ever before (nor ever have since) been so beautiful. Chatting, as one does with someone who's immobilized you by working on your body, I happened to ask him about his name, what it meant; he said it means that I'm occurring right now.

from the book AND AND AND / Shearsman Books
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This was a chance to consider the complexity of simplicity—Agnes Martin’s statement is so simple, and yet her writings accumulate into great complexities. And happy—that word seems so simple, and yet what could have a more complex and radiant web of etymological associations? This conflation led me to a memory of something very simple that simply happened, in every sense of the word. It is, needless to say, dedicated to Happy.

Cole Swensen on "The Goal"
Combined image of the cover of Jennifer Grotz's book, Still Falling, and Jennifer Grotz's headshot
"A Poet’s Meditation on Loss, Light, and Legacy"

"Still Falling encapsulates the author’s poetic inquiry into the themes of loss, light, and legacy. The word 'still,' suggesting both stagnation and continuity, is juxtaposed with 'falling,' evoking a sense of perpetual motion and descent, shaded with the autumnal."

viaUNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
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What Sparks Poetry:
Jessica Fisher on Language as Form


"When the voice began, it wasn’t mine, nor did it belong to anyone else in particular—it was instead something like the possibility of speech beginning again, after a period of long silence. Writing often begins for me with this form of potential opening, and the work is to follow the voice as it accrues—or, to follow its underlying rhythm. I love that the I/you relation so central to lyric poetry can accommodate a simultaneous intimacy and anonymity, that there doesn’t have to be any external circumstance to which the poem refers."
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