“I believe poetry needs to be held, mulled over, stored and shared,” she says. “One can be initially attracted to a poem because of its sound or its imagery, but when read further, more keenly and sensitively, associations can be made. We are associative beings. It is our natural inclination to make connections.”
Through the poems2go website and copies of poems at participating venues, the word is spreading. Poems2go has also hosted in-person events such as readings and discussions at the Grolier Poetry Bookshop in Harvard Square. Poetry readings have included Lesley creative writing faculty members Sharon Bryan and Teresa Cader as well as local poet Julie Ann Otis.
Tapping the power of public art
Christine has a vision for how this work impacts the community and what might be possible when public art is made available to anyone, anywhere. When considering businesses with which to partner, she considers factors such as previous working relationships and whether the location would be a good fit for the group’s message.
“I reached out first to venues I had a connection to, and then to venues I respected and wished to see the project being promoted from, such as Grolier Poetry Bookshop and Porter Square Books,” she explains. “I seek businesses that are genuine in spirit, and wish to promote art/poetry.”
She sets a similar standard for submissions from local, national and international poets who send work to be considered.
“What I look for in a poem is a poet’s underlying gesture that demonstrates a deep listening and response to the world, immediate or abroad, past or future,” she says.
Connecting with Lesley poets
Christine graduated from Lesley’s low residency Creative Writing MFA program in January 2016 and frequently collaborates with her former classmates and Lesley faculty members for poetry submissions and poems2go events including Teresa Cader, Sharon Bryan, Kevin Prufer, and Erin Belieu.
Classmate Michael Mercurio has also been featured on poems2go’s website and local cafes.
“Christine had set the wheels in motion for poems2go before I met her, and I remember her talking about it during a workshop in my first semester,” Michael recalls. “Having the poems available in places where people would encounter them breaks down one of the barriers preventing access to poems.
“It’s fun to see one of my poems out in the wild, too,” he adds.
Another Lesley classmate, Sarah Lain, has joined the initiative to help with reading submissions and to serve as a poems2go ambassador to the St. Petersburg, Fla. area in hopes of furthering the project’s reach. Poems2go is a way to access a medium that is not easy for all people to understand.
“Poetry has a way of slipping past the fastidious, organized mind; it is language that transforms the reader whether the reader knows it or not,” Michael says. “A poem is entirely unlike any other written document—it abides by its own logic, making use of sound and association to create something vivid that will, with any luck, shake the reader awake.”