
For the final week of National Poetry Month, the Passaic County Community College Writing Center blog interviewed Maria Mazziotti Gillan.
Here's a cross-posting:
PCCC: How did you know or when did you know you were a poet?
Maria Mazziotti Gillan (MMG): I knew I wanted to be a poet when I was very young. I started writing when I was 8 years old, and once I saw my poems published when I was 13 I knew that I would never stop being a poet. In a way you don’t chose [poetry], it chooses you. It grabs you by the back of the neck and says this is it.
PCCC: What topics do you most like to explore in your poetry? What influences you?
PCCC: What other types of writing, genre, and art forms are you interested in?
MMG: I am interested in visual art as well as poetry, and I began to paint again about ten years ago. I was encouraged to do that by Beat poet Diane di Prima when we were on a reading tour in California, and I’ll always be grateful to her for that.
PCCC: What advice can you give to beginning poets and poets dealing with rejection?
MMG: My advice to beginning poets is to read and read and read some more, and also to keep writing even when that writing is not getting published. That’s really why I wrote the book on writing because I thought that people needed to be encouraged to keep on going even when they felt that no one was paying attention to them.
PCCC: What’s next?
MMG: I’ll be touring to publicize the book on writing and later this year I have two new poetry books coming out. One is called The Silence in the Empty House (NYQ books, Fall, 2013) and Ancestor’s Song (Bordighera Press, November 2013). Other than that, I’m still writing and reading in lots of places across the country, and I don’t plan to stop anytime soon.
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