|
LEVIS REMEMBERED
Introduction
Many of us here at Blackbird
had the great pleasure of counting Larry Levis as our friend and colleague.
For this reason, we are delighted to offer the first of what we hope will
be annual visits to his work and his voice. These visits coincide with
the presentation of the Levis Reading Prize, given by Larry's family and
the Creative Writing Program at Virginia Commonwealth University, to the
author of a first or second book of poems deemed worthy by VCU's panel
of judges. This year's winner is Steve Scafidi, and his September 27,
2002, reading is a part of our first "Reading Loop." We hope
you will explore it not only to make the acquaintance of Mr. Scafidi and
his poems, but also to revisit the poetry of Larry Levis and remember
the strength of his poetic legacy.
All of those who had the
chance to see or hear Larry read from his poems quite likely found the
experience memorable, and can probably recall the particular informality
of his stance, the way he would lean across a podium to his audience,
remove his glasses, dangle them in his handthrown slightly whomperjawed
from his double-jointed elbowpass his other hand through his hair,
and drop his voice to bring you into the poem, intimately, with a shrug
that was a little self-effacing. His speaking voice resonates deeply in
his poems, and I cannot read "Caravaggio: Swirl & Vortex"
without that voice in my head wrapping its way around "painter of
boy whores" and "perfect / Reverse one-&-a-half gainer from
the high board." We are finding that one of the pleasures of Blackbird
is that it can put the voices that we don't want to lose within the reach
of an enter key or a mouse click. I hope you will sit back with Larry
here and let his voice put an irrevocable stamp on his poems and on how
you will, in the future, hear them in your mind.
We are grateful to Larry's
sister Sheila Brady for permission to print "Bell's Tavern"
and feature the reading of "Caravaggio." We are also grateful
to the Winchester, Virginia, Public Library and Bruce Souders, who provided
the tape of Larry's last reading.
Mary Flinn
|
|