Kevin Spenst is not only an English instructor at 涩里番, but he is also a published poet with four full-length poetry books as well as 17 chapbooks (smaller poetry books).
For a full list of his publications and upcoming events, you can visit his .
Kevin’s passion for poetry has earned him the Lush Triumphant Award for Poetry for his book Ingite as well as nominations for other poetry awards such as the Alfred G. Bailey Poetry Prize.
Q. How did you get into poetry?
First of all, thank you for giving me this chance to share some of my story with everyone at 涩里番.
I鈥檝e been lovestruck with poetry at least twice. When I was fifteen, I bought a paperback anthology in Toronto when my family was in Ontario for two weeks visiting my older sister, and her husband, who was an evangelical minister.
I had just stopped going to church months earlier and this small anthology of poems from the distant past into the 1950s offered a new direction for my faith.
I could believe in the effort of language to communicate wild imaginations, all depths of love and grief, and most importantly an openness to the diversity of the world. I fell in love with poetry and wrote a bit but some years later, after I moved from Surrey to Vancouver, I shifted my creative energies to theater and film.
When I went back to university in 2009 to do a Masters in Creative Writing at UBC, I intended to focus on short fiction, but it was in a poetry class with Keith Mallard where I was reminded of the exciting openness of poetry and that鈥檚 when I fell head over heels in love with poetry again.
I haven鈥檛 stopped writing it since.
My most recent chapbook is called and I鈥檒l be reading from it April 19th at 5pm at the Tech Gallery, which is located at SFU Harbour Centre. I鈥檒l be reading with Marc Perez and Andrew French.
Q. How would you describe your style of poetry?
A poem is a bucket under a leaky ceiling. A poem catches the small moments that continuously fall from an imperfect world.
What I mean by this is that my poetry is open to daily life and thoughts, and to extend the above metaphor, the bucket itself has been molded out of the poems of the past.
I read a lot of poetry old and new and so when I start working on a poem it鈥檚 influenced by all the various elements of craft that I glean in my readings. (Take English 102 if you want to know what is meant by 鈥渃raft鈥!)
Q. Tell me about your latest book A Bouquet Brought Back from Space. What was your inspiration for this book?
Many things, but above all my partner Cheryl Rossi. There鈥檚 also a smattering of different languages used in the collection. In my own very small way, I鈥檇 like to make Canadian Literature as inviting as possible to people who speak other languages.
I鈥檓 always trying to learn bits and pieces of other languages in order to learn about other cultures. The book also has a number of elegiac poems for friends who鈥檝e passed. I suppose curiosity and love is at the core of the book.
I鈥檓 also lucky to have many nieces and nephews and they are now having children. Here鈥檚 a poem (from the chapbook Windowful) that was inspired by an afternoon of playing with my nephew鈥檚 three-year-old:
Q. What advice would you give to aspiring poets?
Read as much poetry as possible, especially the poetry that speaks most deeply to you, but also read widely so you can see poetry鈥檚 many forms, traditions and rebellious breakouts. The series is a good place to start.
Q. At AC, we have a poetry club. If students are interested in getting more involved with the local poetry scene, what would you recommend?
Vancouver鈥檚 newest poet laureate is Elee Kralji Gardiner and on her website there are many resources for finding out about poetry in the Lower Mainland. The best place to start is
I鈥檇 recommend reading this interview with Elee Kralji Gardiner and the previous poet laureate Fiona Tinwei Lam:
Here鈥檚 some of the above type interview:
What do you wish more people understood about the potential that poetry holds to bring people together?
Lam: William Carlos Williams famously wrote, 鈥淚t is difficult / to get the news from poems / yet men die miserably every day for lack / of what is found there.鈥
Poetry can help us express the inexpressible in times of grief and loss and times of uncertainty and fear so we don鈥檛 feel so alone.
Jane Hirshfield wrote, 鈥淧oetry鈥檚 job is to discover wholeness and create wholeness, including the wholeness of the fragmentary and the broken.鈥
Poetry helps us pay attention to what we might take for granted and reconnect with a childlike sense of wonder. It helps us remember and commemorate important events.
As Mary Oliver said, 鈥淔or poems are not words, after all, but fires for the cold, ropes let down to the lost, something as necessary as bread in the pockets of the hungry.鈥
Q. Is there anything else you would like to share with the readers?
I believe education is more important than ever and poetry is a concentration of learning, language and attention. There鈥檚 no better place to learn than inside the freedom, insights and diversity of poetry.
I’ll be leading a poetry-themed Jane’s Walk in the West End on the afternoon of May 4th with a number of local poets. No links are up yet, but mark it in your calendar. It’s free and it will start (rain or shine) outside the Sylvia Hotel at 1pm! See you there!
涩里番 acknowledges that the land on which we usually gather is the traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of the Coast Salish peoples, including the territories of the x史m蓹胃kw蓹y虛蓹m (Musqueam), Skwxw煤7mesh (Squamish), and S蓹l虛铆lw蓹ta蕯/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. We are grateful to have the opportunity to work in this territory.
涩里番 acknowledges that the land on which we usually gather is the traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of the Coast Salish peoples, including the territories of the x史m蓹胃kw蓹y虛蓹m (Musqueam), Skwxw煤7mesh (Squamish), and S蓹l虛铆lw蓹ta蕯/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. We are grateful to have the opportunity to work in this territory.