A Word from the Editor
January 2010
This month, Poetry Northwest enters its 51st year. We are fortunate to be among a very few literary magazines with such endurance and community support. As many readers will know, for most of that half century, the magazine was published in Seattle, at the University of Washington, under the guidance (and often, pure stamina) of longtime editor David Wagoner.
After running into financial difficulties early in the new millennium and suffering a brief period of dormancy, the magazine was revived in Portland, Oregon, at the Attic Writers’ Workshop, in the hands of David Biespiel, who gave it a new look and lease on life. For five years he and his staff worked hard to rebuild the subscription base and set the magazine on a solid foundation. They also turned it into an elegantly readable glossy that, while introducing critical reviews and other prose concerning poetry and poetics into substantially wider pages, still gave poems pride of place, with a little more room around the margins, more breathing space.
Sometimes a little captive wandering is just what an established tradition needs.
Now the magazine returns to the Seattle area—I won’t say from its Babylonian exile, because we have sturdy roots and wonderful readers in Portland from whom we will continue to seek support and draw inspiration. But still, it is a homecoming of sorts, this circling back to the city in which the magazine was born and brought forth by the likes of Errol Pritchard, Carolyn Kizer, and Richard Hugo, to name a few. It is my great honor and privilege to step into this marvelous, enduring enterprise and guide it through its next incarnation.
Poetry Northwest will be published at Everett Community College as an integral part of our dynamic and longstanding Written Arts program. But it will continue to belong to communities of readers across the northwest, from Anchorage to Eureka, and well beyond that, where it has always lived and thrived, in the hearts of readers around the country and the world.
So let’s get started. In addition to our regular monthly web feature, we’ll highlight, in this space, a brand new poem by a poet we admire. This month, we’re featuring Eric McHenry’s “New Year’s Letter to All the Friends I’ve Estranged by Not Writing.” And to all our friends, we say thanks for your continuing enthusiasm and generous support. Rest assured, you have the right address for Poetry Northwest.
Kevin Craft







Congrats Kevin!
What a wonderful opportunity this exciting new undertaking must be for you…Congratulations!
So does this mean I have to up my portfolio requirements?
Really glad to have found your site as a link from Richard Hugo House! I really do miss being in the Seattle area, (was part the Seattle Chapter of SCBWI, PNWA…and so on) but have found a home among the writers and artists on the Columbia River from Astoria/Seaside, Oregon and now into Vancouver. Working on joining more with Willamette Writers, and other local writing groups. We’re having a revitalized art community in Vancouver,so am hoping to help in any way I can.
If you have any suggestions for combining literary and visual arts by sending me links to older articles, posts, or comments from gallery owners who have been successful in providing poetry at art gallery events, I would love to share them with the local talent in this area. I’d also love to hear from poets who have had their work in collaboration with fine arts visual artists, or vise versa.
Thank you!
Hi,
Could you give me Angela Baumgartner’s e-mail address as I have something to share about a poetry and quilt collaboration that resulted in a book. Thanks.
Margaret Chula