Juan Felipe Herrera, U.S. poet laureate, on eating too many chilaquiles and returning to L.A.
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When he was young, Juan Felipe Herrera wanted to be a public speaker. âI dreamed of standing in front of an audience and giving these long speeches,â he explains by phone. But then he discovered poetry, and the color of the world changed. âPeople talk about seeing things through rose-colored glasses, but I started seeing things through poetry-colored glasses.â
On April 9, Herrera will be awarded the L.A. Times Book Prizeâs 2015 Robert Kirsch Award for lifetime achievement. âYouâve written poetry, prose, childrenâs books, young adult books and even plays,â I ask him. âIs there something you havenât achieved that I donât know about? Did you climb Mt. Everest?â
âNâombre,â he says. âI didnât, but I did recently climb Mt. Chilaquiles.â
We laugh. I had caught Herrera just as he was waking up from a nap. Thereâs a slight rasp in his voice, and when I apologize for interrupting his rest he laughs again. âNo worries, man. Itâs good to hear you, hermanito.â He wants to know what Iâve been up to since we saw each other in January at Cal State L.A.âs Center for Contemporary Poetry and Poetics, what Iâm writing, if Iâm still commuting between L.A. and Fresno. I tell him Iâm good and remind him that weâre supposed to talk about his role as our countryâs poet laureate and about his Kirsch Award.
Herrera, who was born to migrant farmworkers in Fowler, Calif., in 1948, is the U.S. poet laureate. From 2012 to â15, he served as poet laureate for California and counts a Guggenheim Fellowship, a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and a National Book Critics Circle Award for poetry among his list of honors.
He has written more than 30 books, including the poetry collections âNotes of the Assemblageâ (2015), â187 Reasons Mexicanos Canât Cross the Borderâ (2007) and âCrashboomlove: A Novel in Verseâ (1999). His many books for children and young adults include âPortraits of Hispanic American Heroesâ (2014).
People talk about seeing things through rose-colored glasses, but I started seeing things through poetry-colored glasses.
— Juan Felipe Herrera, U.S. Poet Laureate
When he graduated from UCLA in 1972 with a degree in social anthropology, Herrera set his sights on a career in social work while pursuing a masterâs degree at Stanford. Eventually he wound up in the Bay Area entranced by activism and poetry. After turning 40, Herrera attended the Iowa Writers Workshop, part of a long academic career â he retired from his post as the TomĂĄs Rivera Endowed Chair at UC Riverside last year.
âOrale pues,â he says. âLetâs talk.â
He says the Kirsch Award is meaningful because it signifies recognition from a place that has shaped so much of his understanding as an artist and activist. âItâs nice to be getting this award from the L.A. Times. I started back in the â60s. Iâm humbled to be representing those who are no longer with us. Iâm talking about people like Luis Omar Salinas, Francisco X. AlarcĂłn, and Gloria AnzaldĂșa. Itâs in that spirit, hermano. Thereâs so much creative energy out there that we need to tap, and I accept this award in honor of those voices we have yet to hear from too.â
Herreraâs position as poet laureate has afforded him an opportunity to encounter some of those unheard voices from across the nation. âIâm a primordial vago,â he jokes of his travels. âIâm wearing a zoot suit and carrying a basket of elotes and tamales wherever I go. My visits have allowed me an opportunity to experience the explosive creative energy Chicanos and Chicanas are producing. Students approach me and ask, âHow do I identify myself?â I tell them that things are blurring more now. We are many things. Young raza are interested in figuring out who they are, and theyâre very interested in activism.â
As someone whose early life was spent following the annual piscas up and down the state with his family, Herreraâs no stranger to the struggles of the undocumented. His experiences have shaped his role as the nationâs first Mexican American poet laureate, giving it a uniquely Chicano sensibility.
âBut,â I ask, âIâm interested to know what Californio sensibility you think youâre offering as U.S poet laureate that no one else has?â
âI bring the borderlands soul,â he says. âI bring the bilingual, indigenous, gospel and mural life from Southern California. I bring my early days in San Diego and Tijuana. I bring Alurista, Yolanda Luera, Jorge Gonzalez and the Chicana Womenâs Collectives. I bring jazz straight from Thelonius Monk at Shellyâs Mannhole in L.A., the civil rights fever from UCLA and L.A. and East Los. I bring marches, rallies, demonstrations all pouring into my life and writing. I bring Oscar Zeta Acosta and el Teatro Chicano. I bring S.F., Bay Area, tropicalizations, international and Central American culture, life and social-change poets and peoples and landscapes. I bring Alejandro Murguia, Roberto Vargas, Nina Serrano, Jack Hirschman and so many writers collectives, and jazz pioneers like Francis Wong, Genny Lim, gay and lesbian poets and collectives in Haight-Ashbury and the Castro districts. I bring Steve Abbot, Tede Matthews and Karen Brodine. I bring a multicultural scene of all colors. San Diego, Tijuana, L.A. and S.F. were my libraries, my workshops, my poetry tutorials and volcanoes from 1956 to 1985.â
We talk about the talismanic power of cilantro â on Twitter, Herrera is @cilantroman â and I recall taking him for tacos near my motherâs house in Colton and cruising up and down Agua Mansa Road in my Honda as I showed him the geography of my first novel years ago. I was kicking up all kinds of crazy old espĂritos back then, I say.
He remembers that experience. âIt was all opening up for you. I was fortunate enough to see it.â
When I ask if he can pinpoint the moment when it all opened up for him, he says there are too many. âBut I have to say,â he adds, âI was part of the lineup of readers at the first Festival de Flor y Canto in 1973. It was one of the largest gatherings of raza writers and artists. It went on for three days. There I was with all these heavyweights. We were at USC, and I took the stage and read. So Iâm going back to that campus to accept the Kirsch. Imagine it?
âWhat a trip, no? Full circle y todo.â
Espinozaâs latest novel is âThe Five Acts of Diego LeĂłn.â He is visiting associate professor and interim director of the bilingual MFA in creative media and literary arts at Cal State Los Angeles.
Herrera will receive the Los Angeles Times Book Prizeâs Robert Kirsch Award for Lifetime Achievement on April 9.
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