‘A Fine Canopy’ brings you outdoors while the world is stuck inside

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By CHIOMA LEWIS
Capital News Service

LANSING — Poet Alison Swan became a creative writer long before she was an environmental activist.

She fell in love with written words as soon as she could read and started writing poems when she was little.

Her new book “A Fine Canopy” is a collection of poems about nature and the environment.

“A book like this was in my imagination from the time I was a little girl,” said Swan, who teaches environment and sustainability at Western Michigan University and attended the University of Michigan and Michigan State University.

When she decided to create the book, she had already written hundreds of poems and many book-length manuscripts.

“A Fine Canopy” (Wayne State University Press, $16.99) is her first book of poems  accepted by a publisher.

The cover of ‘A Fine Canopy

Wayne State University Press.

The cover of ‘A Fine Canopy

“Some of the poems in this book are really old, like decades old,” Swan said. “Some of the poems are very new.”

The right alchemy of poems finally happened, and “A Fine Canopy” was born. But when her manuscript was accepted in August 2019, Swan had no idea it would be published during a pandemic.

She’d be happy to hear that the book is good company for people who feel stuck indoors now, she said. People are looking for reading that makes them connect with parts of their lives that they miss, like getting outside into nature.

“There is a bit of blue in everything 

  even shadows enfolding 

  these scraps 

  twigs—, planks, spindles

 It is all wood

 and it was all sky once”

Something that interests her about her poems is that they almost always arise out of places where  she’s lived — Florida, Seattle, Boston and the Great Lakes Basin.

These places are important to her connection with land, environment and nature.

“I rarely write poems about places I haven’t lived,” Swan said.

One of the most important places she writes about is Michigan where she grew up. 

“It would have been impossible not to include it,” Swan said.

For example, in “Grace,” she writes about a Michigan winter.

“Midwinter, mid-Michigan

  who doesn’t love a cardinal,

  something red and quick and loud?”

The book also includes the poem “Detroit,” named after the city where she was born.

“And I was dragging 

 decades of concrete

 behind me without even realizing

Drop them then

Tear them up and plant

vegetables in a parking lot”

The book’s title originates from the poem “Here.” The poem came about from her feeling that something was missing from the book and wanting to write about the joy in her immediate life.

“Here, it is the custom to leave the windows open, uncovered. The ingenious mesh makes a fine             canopy.”

The fine canopy she talks about comes from her love of leaves and gratitude for living in a place with many mature trees.

She said her decision to attend Michigan State University was largely influenced by her love of the campus and the surrounding nature.

“Even at 18 I was aware that my mental well-being is going to be better served by being on this campus with all these incredible trees,” Swan said.

Those trees form the canopy that made its way into the book.

Each poem is as unique as nature itself, and the form of the poems evolves out of working with images and sounds.

Poet Alison Swan has imagined a book of poetry about nature since she was a young girl.

Alison Swan

Poet Alison Swan has imagined a book of poetry about nature since she was a young girl.

“I think in terms of individual poems,” Swan said. “For me, each individual poem is kind of its own event.”

According to Swan, she likes to engage all the reader’s senses easily and immediately with words.

“I am biased towards words as opposed to pictures,” Swan said.

She’s particularly fond of  “Back Country” because it explores motherhood.

“just as she began to leave me, a leaving 

  that feels like a light storm, brilliant white light that

  makes me close my eyes when they should be open”

Motherhood helped her connect with wildness as a human being on Earth, she said.

“One of my great loves is — noticing something interesting in nature and then finding words about it and putting them on the page,” Swan said. “It endlessly engages me.”

Chioma Lewis writes for Great Lakes Echo.

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