Interview of Mario Duarte by Xánath Caraza
Who
is Mario Duarte?
I
am a Mexican American poet and fiction writer born and raised in Western
Illinois. My family has lived in the
Midwest for over a hundred years and my family and Mexican culture is an
important part of the foundation of who I am and informs my interests, topics,
and my outlook.
As
a child, who first introduced you to reading?
My
mother guided me through my first readings. She would read to me before bed,
and often recited poems from memory that she learned in grade school. My mother
told me that even as a very young child I showed a great interest in books, and
I remember reading Little Golden Books.
How
did you first become a poet?
In
my first year of college at the University of Iowa, I enrolled in Interpretation
of Literature, which sparked my interest in English and writing and I even wrote
some sonnets. Soon, I became an English major, and after a couple years started
taking creative writing classes. At first, I mostly wrote short stories, but
after my first poetry writing class, I was hooked and have never stopped
writing poetry. I am a graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop where I studied
and wrote poetry. About a dozen years ago, I started writing short stories
again.
What
else would you like to share with La Bloga readers?
I
divide my time writing between short stories and poetry. In January 2024, my
micro poetry collection To the Death of the Author will be published by
La Resistencia Press, and in April 2024, my short story collection Monkeys
will be published by the Ice Cube Press.
The
following poems were inspired by time spent in Anton Chico, New Mexico, summer
2023, when wildfires were raging nearby.
I
Am Not My Father’s Dream
counting
smoke plumes
on
the mesa horizon
while
yucca spire buds
remain un-blossomed.
Between
rocks guarding
the
front door, a sunflower
stalk
bends. I welt too.
Yellow
flames wake the air.
Am
I the elk rushing
out
of the forest,
on
fire, moaning into
hot
wind while flames lick
my
ankles, my torso?
Today
is iron red,
a
fiery dust
devil
swirling us.
A
hummingbird flits,
beats
by my head, pauses.
I
bite my tongue,
salt
tides in my mouth.
I
raise a hand, high,
but
its zeros off, why? —
yellow
smoke hammers
every
last mesa away.
Ricardo
from his Adobe Says
See
the rusty horseshoe
embedded
in the threshold—fading.
Listen
to the screeching
of
the turkey out back.
Place your eye to the pane,
soon
nothing but darkness.
A
tear does not retrace
a
trail back into the eye.
On
three sides of the sky,
plumes
of wildfire fly.
Sunlight
ghosts a chemtrail
pointing
straight down at us.
The
sentence is mine, yours,
a
string of dry chiles.
Slow
down, like the pendulum
inside
the mantle clock.
Conquistadors
used crossbows,
long
daggers, and spears—time
is
a rotting horse, a tale
of
history, closing distance.
Mario
Duarte
is Mexican American writer of poetry and short stories. He grew up in Western
Illinois, and his family has lived in the Midwest for over a hundred years. He
is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and the University of New Hampshire
and is an academic advisor for the University of Iowa. His poems and short
stories have appeared in American Poetry Review, 2River Review, Abstract
Elephant, American Writers Review, Bilingual/Borderless, Digging Through the
Fat, Lunch Ticket, Pank, Rigorous, Sky Island Journal, Plainsongs, Write Launch
and Typishly. In January of 2024, his micro poetry collection To the Death
of the Author will be published by La Resistencia Press. In April of 2024,
his short story collection Monkeys will be published by the Ice Cube
Press.
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