Credit: COURTESY OF MILKWEED EDITIONS
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COURTESY OF MILKWEED EDITIONS

I burned through Philomath: Poems, the debut poetry collection from Devon Walker-Figueroa, in one sitting. A narrative coming-of-age poetry collection laced with searing imagery and gut-punch single-line revelations, Philomath is about Walker-Figueroaโ€™s childhood in Benton Countyโ€™s rural community, Kings Valley, and in nearby town Philomath. (You can read the collectionโ€™s titular poem, one of its best, here.)

Philomath, which came out this week, is a 2020 National Poetry Series winner, and blurbed by the likes of Joyce Carol Oates and Sally Keith.

โ€œI never wrote with the assumption they would read it,โ€ Walker-Figueroa says in a recent interview with the Mercury. โ€œItโ€™s a wild dream come true, but it also doesnโ€™t feel entirely real to me.โ€

These days, Walker-Figueroa lives in Brooklyn, and is working on her second Masters of Fine Artsโ€”the first was in poetry, and this one is in fiction.

โ€œItโ€™s interesting to be promoting poetry and working on fiction,โ€ she says. โ€œIt feels a little bit like having two gods. Which is fineโ€”Iโ€™m definitely pro-pagan, in true Oregon fashion.โ€

Hereโ€™s more of our conversation, which touches on Biblical themes, Oregoniansโ€™ paradoxical relationship to nature, and the challenges of writing about people you know.

MERCURY: My first question is the most obvious one: What made you want to write about your childhood in rural Oregon?

WALKER-FIGUEROA: For one, these people haunted me, this place. I havenโ€™t lived there for a number of years, but I come back and visit my familyโ€”this place really went with me everywhere Iโ€™ve gone. Iโ€™m not sure I couldโ€™ve written this first book about anything else, to be honest. Maybe itโ€™s an inevitability to have a fascination with where one is from, to have a point of origin. But beyond that, there were a lot of people I encountered in that area, that I felt like their stories, what I had of them to tell, were worth sharing.

Thereโ€™s a sense, living in a rural place sometimes, that no one knows what happens to you or the people there. Thereโ€™s a sense that your life might pass unseen. Maybe this is just a way to let those lives be seen a little better.

“Coming of age in that setting, being immersed in that culture, upsetting things happen to you, and you donโ€™t have the bandwidth or the vantage or outside perspective to identify the problems as theyโ€™re occurring.”

Something I noticed while reading Philomath is that you write about some really traumatic issuesโ€”abuse, addiction, natural disastersโ€”but never seem to cast judgement on your characters. Was that intentional?

I thought about that quite a bit, actually. One thing I wanted to capture in the book was that coming of age in that setting, being immersed in that culture, upsetting things happen to you, and you donโ€™t have the bandwidth or the vantage or outside perspective to identify the problems as theyโ€™re occurring. I trust my readers enough that I think theyโ€™ll understand if something troubling or wrong is happening without my editorializing it.

My mother was one of these Good Samaritan types, and she liked to care for those she felt most needed it. Itโ€™s a wonderful idea, but also, that can bring issues with it when youโ€™re raising a family and inviting relative strangers into your home.

Speaking of a Good Samaritan, this collection also felt very Biblical to me. There are overt references to church and Christianity, but also Biblical themes: male violence, blood and fire, a rotating cast of mysterious characters that appear and disappear just as quickly.

For me, that connects to the region. There are a lot of small towns in Oregon that are steeped in Christianity. A lot of the social opportunities arise around churches or bars. Itโ€™s probably a product of being in a space like that.

Kings Valley doesnโ€™t have a lot of buildings besides houses and barns, but it does have a few churches. Culturally, thereโ€™s not a whole lot of activity going on, and yet thereโ€™s a vacation Bible school, and a church thatโ€™s doing a better job staying alive than a school. These are spaces people can rely on for connectionโ€”not everybody, but itโ€™s definitely part of the culture out there.

Itโ€™s easy to idealize landscapesโ€ฆ But to be in those landscapes and to feel small and humbled in them, and yet to recognize how fragile they are, really drives home to me how fragile we are.

Something Iโ€™m always very aware of when writing anything based on real life is that youโ€™ll have to face feedback from the people youโ€™re writing about. Youโ€™re brutally honest in these poems; did you worry about loved onesโ€™ reactions?

I very much thought about that. When I wrote a number of these poems, I never necessarily thought theyโ€™d be seen by people. The first poems I wrote, I was an undergrad at Bennington College in Vermont. I was trying to just begin writing poems; I hadnโ€™t set out to write a book yet. So I felt a real sense of freedom in not feeling looked-at or examined.

I protected peopleโ€™s identitiesโ€”I changed names, and combined people. When you grow up in a small place like that, people will recognize themselves, but [friends I grew up with] gave positive feedback.

It was very stressful to share the book with people Iโ€™m closest toโ€ฆ My dad actually hasnโ€™t read the book yet. Heโ€™ll be getting his copy in the mail. Iโ€™m nervous about that, actually. There are some people in my extended family who, I kind of hope they donโ€™t read it, because it feels like an exposure to criticismโ€ฆ Iโ€™ve tried to be as honest and fair and transparent with people as possible. Now I just hope for the best. It doesnโ€™t belong to me anymore.

Another thing that stood out to me in Philomath is the way you write about Pacific Northwest nature. A lot of writing about the natural beauty here can verge on being boring, but you focus more on the dark side of nature: dying cedars, animal carcasses, fires.

It occurs to meโ€”there are all these premonitions of fires in my book, and now the real fires. Itโ€™s very surreal.

Growing up in that area, itโ€™s an area where the logging industry still has a very strong presence. I remember seeing clear-cuts happen. Youโ€™d see where they were happening: One little spot on a hillside, and then theyโ€™d spread. I remember how upsetting that wasโ€”it was like my world was being dismantled when I saw that happening.

I grew up in a relatively conservative household. My parents were pro-logging industry, and yet they also, paradoxically, loved the landscape and took very good care of their own property. My mother interviewed a lot of the last remaining steam-age loggers in Oregon, and collected their tall tales. โ€ฆ The reverence that they had for the landscapes that their work employed them to destroyโ€”those paradoxical relationships to nature in Oregon in particular, that really struck me at a very young age. I can hardly remember a time in my life when I wasnโ€™t aware of that.

It seems incumbent upon us to note the ways weโ€™ve affected our environments, and not to pretend theyโ€™re pristine when theyโ€™re not. Itโ€™s easy to idealize landscapesโ€ฆ it really can be so beautiful. But to be in those landscapes and to feel small and humbled in them, and yet to recognize how fragile they are, really drives home to me how fragile we are. This landscape seems so permanent, so overwhelming and beautiful and secure, but itโ€™s not. What does that mean for us?

Philomath came out on September 14; you can purchase it from Milkweed Editions.

Blair Stenvick is a former news reporter and culture writer for the Portland Mercury.