Mild-mannered librarian Gary Clark hides a rich alter ego, a second self
who is a successful poet.
Clark specializes in speculative poetry, a genre or subcategory of poetry
that plays with science fiction, fantasy and horror elements.
In fact, Clark is the secretary of the Science Fiction Poetry
Association, a group with about 200 members that gives out annual awards
for their particular kind of poetry.
“If you like reading science fiction, fantasy and horror you’ll like
speculative poetry,” Clark says. “It’s not something you’re going to find
in The New Yorker magazine or in academic magazines but it reaches out,
it’s accessible,” he added.
His latest chapbook is “Bone Sprockets” published by Dark Regions Press
of Brentwood. Dark Regions also published two previous Clark chapbooks.
“Bone Sprockets” is available at Bogey’s Books in downtown Davis for
$5.95.
“Beans Bizarre” is the first poem in the book, which Clark wrote after
sipping a cup of coffee at Café Roma some years ago:
“Down at the café,
UFO abductees sip mochas
While trading snapshots
Of their dreams,
Novice Draculas sit
Motionless behind their dark
Glasses, languidly sucking
On double expressos,
And decaf zombies
Stare into the black holes of
Their coffee mugs, no longer
Wondering – what next?”
He credits his Rancho Yolo neighborhood for the creative prompt that gave
rise to “Live and Let Live.” Here’s the first stanza:
“The aliens next door
Are fighting again, the same old
Arguments about unfulfilled expectations,
Lack of funds, and moving to this
Town in the first place.”
“I write whenever the spirit hits me, so to speak,” he said in a recent
interview. “Mostly on weekends. I write it out in longhand first and it
goes through several revisions.”
Clark writes poetry because it’s the form he feels most comfortable with.
“I seem to have a voice for it,” he says. A little success helps, too.
After a few poems see publication, you’re hooked. Add to that a handful
of poetry awards and Clark admits that he can’t stop.
“It encourages you to go on,” he said, citing a 60 percent publication
rate for his speculative poetry. Mainstream poetry is harder to place.
He says it takes persistence to be a good poet.
“You hone your skills as you go along,” he said. Like any skill, it takes
time and practice.
“I write free verse,” he said. “I don’t worry about style so much as
running out of ideas and so far that hasn’t happened. But I do want my
poems to sound right and that can take three or four revisions. They have
to sound right.”
Clark says he is obsessed with time.
“I’m obsessed with it because for one thing I’m running out of it,” he
said. On the other hand, he’s looking forward to his retirement from UC
Davis – still several years away – because it will give him more time to
write.
“Time is fun to play with, too,” he said. “I like writing about
past/future and I like reading good narrative histories and alternate
histories.” Clark said he first tried his hand at writing during
college when he took short story writing classes and attempted to write
his first poems.
Clark earned a bachelor’s degree in English from San Jose State in 1975.
“It was a survey course in contemporary American poetry taught by Rob
Swigart – who later went on to write a number of novels – that helped
spur my interest,” he said. Clark’s first poem was published in the Big
Sur Gazette in 1979.
“More rejection slips followed but so did acceptance slips,” he said.
“Eventually two chapbooks saw print: ‘Letting the Eye to Wonder,’ and ‘7
Degrees of Something,’ in 1990 and 1991, respectively. He describes those
two collections as largely mainstream poems although he said one reviewer
recently discovered that a few seeds of speculative poetry can be found
among them.
His first speculative poem was published in 1988 in the Magazine of
Speculative Poetry.
Since then, a drought of a few years, then more acceptances and a few
awards. And so it goes.
“I still feel like I’m learning my craft,” he says.
Married and divorced twice, he helped raise his son, Ian, in Davis.
Along the way, he became an “avid reader of anything and everything that
caught my interest” and can frequently be seen checking out the latest
arrivals in local bookstores. He likes science fiction prose writers
Stephen Baxter and Joe Haldeman.
Clark has a cat, Ariel. He denies that she offers any inspiration at all
and yet she makes appearances in his poems.
-- Reach Elisabeth Sherwin at gizmo@dcn.org and in a future column find out what Dan Kennedy has been up to on this web site.
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