Sunday, March 29, 2026

Poet Trapper Markelz sends his daughters 'off to war'





Interview with Doug Holder


I contacted poet Trapper Markelz about his new collection of poetry, " Off to War, Daughter."  Trapper is on the advisory board of the New England Poetry.

Trapper Markelz (he/him) writes from Arlington, Massachusetts. He is the author of the chapbooks Childproof Sky (Cherry Dress, 2023) and Off To War, Daughter (Rockwood Press, 2026). His work has appeared in the journals Baltimore Review, Passengers Journal, Pine Row Press, Wild Roof Journal, The Dewdrop, and Poetry Online, among others. Learn more at trappermarkelz.com




You are a high-tech person-- what led you to poetry?


It is true, I’ve been involved in technology since a very early age. You actually get a view of this in the last poem of my book titled Standing Ovation, where I describe some of my earliest interactions with my grandfather about programming games in BASIC on my Laser 128 Apple-compatible computer. From there, I went on to run dial-up bulletin board systems (BBSs) out of my basement in junior high and high school, and on to the internet and websites through the 90s into online community development, ad networks, video games, healthcare, and beyond.


Much of the work with software and technology is writing. The code is a language. The developer and customer documentation is language. The design and technical specifications are language. The documents for running a company, fundraising, pitching, business deals, and day-to-day operations–it's all language that has to communicate not just with machines, but lots of different kinds of people.


I got into poetry pretty late. I heard an NPR episode about Jim Harrison's life in 2018 and started exploring his work. From there, the floodgates opened, and I started reading voraciously. Works included Ted Kooser, Billy Collins, Tom Hennen, Jane Hirshfield, Louise Glück, and Jane Kenyon. I got a POETRY subscription, as well as Rattle, a half dozen others, and was just reading poetry at every moment.


Growing up, it was common in my family to try new things. We value hobbies and the process of becoming curious about something, learning it, and doing it. I was just standing in the shower one day, and I killed a little bug that was crawling on the windowsill… and a bunch of words just flashed into my mind. I jumped out of the shower and wrote them down. That was my first poem. I’ve been learning, writing, and submitting ever since.


What is different about this collection of poetry from others that you have written?


Well, it’s only my second collection [laughs], and it continues in a theme of family. My first book, Childproof Sky (Cherrydress Chapbooks, 2023), was about the loss of my daughter, June, to SIDS in 2009 and the grief and growth that came from that. I wanted this second book to be about living in the shadow of that loss, but also how you can step into new light. When you lose a child, you live with the new reality that it can happen again. Your perspective on everything shifts. Before losing a child, you feel a bit invincible, and then that armor is ripped away in one moment, and it’s easy to find yourself hesitating around every corner.


But I didn’t want to live that way. This new book, Off to War, Daughter (Rockwood Press 2026), is about how you can build a new kind of armor forged from moving forward–how you can get back in the arena, I guess, as Roosevelt wrote. My poem There is Fire, goes right at this feeling:
There is Fire


She watches orange paper lanterns

reach across the twilight pond–

one by one in a soft wind

extinguished


and submerged, except for one

single lantern

arcing away

in missing man formation


before a sudden sign of flame

pitches firefly embers

that fade in the cold,

young wishes

that slip to space.


I’m watching her grow up.

Right now. By this water,

releasing lanterns


like I release her


—into the water,


the wind,

the dark,

the flame.





In that poem, you have elements of fire, water, rain, etc., to describe your children's release into the world. It sounds like some Shakespearean maelstrom. Do you ever feel like King Lear at the edge — screaming against these very elements? The lurking storm ahead?


[laughs] I’m not really much of a screamer, to be honest. But I was a child once. I did grow up like the rest of us. I found myself dodging my way through the shooting gallery that is life. I look back at how I made it to this moment and, wow, if it isn’t a whole bunch of luck!


At the heart of that poem is an image of all these lanterns lifting off, sailing into the sky. Some were blown right back down into the water and extinguished before even starting. Others floated around and crashed into each other. Others never even lifted off. But this one lantern… it somehow beat the odds. It lifted up and sailed away from the others. We want our kids to be that lantern.


That is probably what scares me the most, how much random chance this all is. My wife and I could do everything right, and we could still see these beacons of hope and light extinguished. That’s just something I meditate on regularly. You have to get to a place where you acknowledge it. We can’t control whether the storms come and go. We just have to live through them, hope we make it to the next day, and be ok with that hope.


I never had children, and your poems about your four daughters seem to be a love song, laced with fear for their future. How hard is it to let go of children?


I’ve been so lucky, which, when you lose a child, is a real triumph to be able to say. It all starts with my amazing wife, Maureen, who is just one of the most resilient and stable people I’ve ever met in the world. You don’t need an amazing marriage to raise amazing kids, but it sure does help. Life is a team sport, and not having to do it alone is such a gift. Having a solid foundation like that makes it a lot easier to see your kids grow and move on.


I grew up the oldest of four, and in my family, it was pretty clear that the expectation was that we were to go out into the world and make our own space. I like to think I’ve passed that on to my kids, and they are excited to get out there and build a life. I wouldn’t say it’s hard to let go. I’m excited to see them thrive and build their own life. What can be hard is when you think back to what’s passed, about how challenging, but how fun those days were when they were younger and everything that has changed. But it’s a joy to have lived through that and be here now watching them grow, entering new life stages, and telling new stories.


I’ve also been lucky to have a son, Jack, as well, the two of us smiling as all these strong women orbit around us. I’m planning my next collection around him, my Dad, and some of the other friends in my life. It’s been great seeing him grow into a smart and kind young man who benefits from all these sisters! Although he might not see it that way! [laughs] But seriously, it’s a great household, and they are all a big part of my writing as I try to find a little meaning from the meaningless.


You have been influenced by the poet Jim Harrison, a poet and writer who was known for his intimacy with nature...it was his religion-- so to speak. Is this true for you? What do you take from this writer?


Harrison was the first poet I really connected with. I credit his work with opening the door for me to experience poetry. I was born in Alaska and grew up surrounded by nature. It’s something I took for granted when I was younger because it was just all around me. But as I've grown older, I’ve been drawn back to places and pastimes that put me outdoors. My kids have grown up camping in New Hampshire and hiking the White Mountains. I’ve discovered a love of cycling down winding roads, and fishing the quiet of a pond at sunrise or sunset.


Much of what Harrison writes about are these moments that connect our small human experience to time and nature, which is so large. I also strive in my own work to connect the everyday to big ideas. He has a poem in his book Songs of Unreason that I remember reading for the first time, and it just left me dumbstruck. It’s a short untitled piece that goes “I read so much that my single eye became hot / as if it had been staring into nebulae. / Of course it had. On some clear nights in the country / the stars can exhaust us. They only mean what they are.” I strive for that clarity and that perspective of the immense in my own work, and enjoy revisiting it in his.


Why should we read this book?

I typically read the books of people with whom I somehow develop a connection. Maybe it’s an interview or a poem that appears in some journal. You connect with that, and you think, “I felt something there… I’m interested in feeling more.” Maybe that happened here today!

Friday, March 27, 2026

Red Letter Poem #293

  The Red Letters

 

 

In ancient Rome, feast days were indicated on the calendar by red letters.

To my mind, all poetry and art serves as a reminder that every day we wake together beneath the sun is a red-letter day.

 

––SteveRatiner

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Red Letter Poem #293

 

 

 

 

 

Making Love in a Cemetery

 

 

Here, the Tantrics and Sufis dance away fear

when the moon is full of herself, the sky a void.

Old four-armed Death can never lift her spear

when those monks chant and keep their circle squared.

Our bodies open now, atop the Mother,

we shudder in each other's arms.  A Druid

terror enters with love’s ebbing tide—

what moon-drowned promise are we drawn to here?

 

Can we, ringed by darkness and our waning need,

utter one word for burial, place of seed?

Will we break this spellbound circle, or ever know

what Spirit, what lightening sky we're praying to—

here, where love and fear draw the same breath,

fusing our lives in this first phase of our death?

 

 

                                   ––Carolyne Wright

                                   

 

 

 

 

 

When I was an erstwhile English major (several centuries ago, it seems––a feeling many of you may also be experiencing), the literary portrayal of April contained decidedly mixed messages.  There was: “Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote,/ The droghte of March hath perced to the roote,”––Eng. 205, Intro to Chaucer.  The professor made us memorize the first fifty lines of the Canterbury Tale’s Prologue and recite them before the class.  I certainly understood the drought that epitomized my sophomore year––but as I spoke the verses, my attention kept drifting toward a certain young woman in the third row, and the sweet-smelling mist that seemed always to envelop her.  How I longed to bathe every veyne, every leaf and petal, in love’s swich licóur.  But, that same semester, I’d somehow talked my way into the advanced Modern Poetry seminar where I was offered austere Mr. Eliot’s pronouncement: “April is the cruellest month, breeding/ Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing/ Memory and desire, stirring/ Dull roots with spring rain.”  Instant buzz-kill, to be sure, and my visions of passionate embrace were swept away.  Right there, in the actual ‘spring of my life,’ the confluence of love and death made my head spin.  It would take some time before I’d learn how inextricably woven they were, each amplifying the meaning of the other, and teasing out unexpected possibilities.  Perhaps Carolyne Wright learned that lesson earlier than I, and used it to temper the steel and strengthen the silk of her poetry.  Writer, educator, editor, translator, Carolyne’s life is the full flowering of that traditional English curriculum.  Author of a dozen poetry collections––including, most recently, Masquerade, a memoir in poetry, and This Dream the World: New & Selected Poems (both published by Lost Horse Press)––her work has received numerous honors including a Pushcart Prize, a poem selected by by The Best American Poetry, three Fulbright grants and another from the National Endowment for the Arts.

 

I think today’s poem requires a few readings in order to feel how the formality of its diction and creative approach result in an array of push-pull forces, setting head and heart into motion.  Carolyne is presenting to us that most unbridled of passionate encounters: teenaged lust, played out in one of the few places young lovers can resort to for privacy––the graveyard.  But It all takes place within the staid elegance that is her loosely-rhymed Italian sonnet.  “(T)he moon is full of herself, the sky a void”––and the tension between presence and absence is already rising.  Quick bursts of mystic philosophy cloud our heads, but our senses are carrying us away.  “Our bodies open now, atop the Mother,/ we shudder in each other's arms.”  What a marvelous whiplash burst of electricity conjured by that one image: this couple writhing atop––either a gravestone marked Mother, or the primordial notion of the Great Mother whose planetary abundance is the source of all life.  No wonder “A Druid/ terror enters with love’s ebbing tide.”  Once we actually come to understand that death and loss are not simply childish nightmares––and that, impossible as it seems, we will not be exempt––every burst of pleasure, each act of love is a way to, if not forestall oblivion, then at least defy it.

 

The formal rhyme scheme of the poem is a stabilizing presence, even as we reflect on what such an act signifies.  “Will we break this spellbound circle,” or ever know what undiscovered emotional, societal and, dare I say, spiritual forces are driving our actions?  I remember when some prof at my university spoke of the 16th century French concept of ‘little deaths’ (la petite mort), referring to those moments of profound transition embodied in sexual release.  What a haunting notion to plant inside the overactive mind of a nineteen-year-old!  To accept that, as Carolyne phrases it, “love and fear draw the same breath” is to settle into our mortal bodies––not necessarily more comfortably but more honestly.  Even thinking about this today, I recall the words of that other learned medievalist, David Bowie, who sang: “They pulled in just behind the bridge/ He lays her down, he frowns:/ Gee my life's a funny thing, am I still too young?”  Some days, I feel that may be the case.  Or should we white-haired teenagers turn to another lyric from almost the same year, this from Mr. Dylan: “May you stay forever young.”  Something we can hum under our breath as we prepare ourselves for our April pilgrimage.

 

 

 

 

The Red Letters

 

* If you would like to receive these poems every Friday in your own in-box – or would like to write in with comments or submissions – send correspondence to:

steven.arlingtonlaureate@gmail.com

 

 

To learn more about the origins of the Red Letter Project, check out an essay I wrote for Arrowsmith Magazine:

https://www.arrowsmithpress.com/community-of-voices

 

The weekly installment is also available at

the Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene

http://dougholder.blogspot.com

 

For updates and announcements about Red Letter projects and poetry readings, please follow me on BlueSky

@stevenratiner.bsky.social

and on Twitter          

@StevenRatiner

 

And visit the Red Letter archives at: https://StevenRatiner.com/category/red-letters/

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Quantity Theory of Morality by Will Self

Will Self - The Quantity Theory Of Morality




Book Review: The Quantity Theory of Morality by Will Self

 Review by Ed Meek

I’m late to reading Will Self, author of 22 works of fiction and 9 works of nonfiction, shortlisted for the Booker prize numerous times, ditto the Whitbread novel of the year, the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize. The Quantity Theory of Morality is a bookend to The Quantity Theory of Insanity written 35 years ago. The former claims there’s a surfeit of insanity; his current novel brings back a character to argue there isn’t enough morality in our age to keep us on track.

The novel focuses on a group of upper middle class British friends, gathering together over a period of years. Self includes a character named after himself. Each chapter is written from the point of view of one of the characters. Self plays with their identity by having them straight, gay, and trans in different chapters. Through the novel he lampoons middle class professionals, psychiatrists, government workers, spies, lawyers, financiers, Jews, AI, funerals, mortality, etc. It is clear they’re in a decadent era after the fall of the British empire-a fate we are soon headed for.

Self is a writer’s writer. He’s constantly pushing the limits of fiction. He knows and uses multiple languages and has an amazing word-hoard. The novel is packed with references. He knows his bible. Above all, he is laugh out loud funny and if someone else is in the room when you are reading him, you’ll want to read passages aloud.

As to the title, “The quantity theory of morality, Bettina, concerns the human propensity to do things they hold to be either right or wrong—to commit themselves to this exercise of justice, or injustice; and to allow either evil, or righteousness to enter into their being.” This brings up a question many of us find ourselves asking these days. How can these people running our country live with themselves? Self seems to think they are aware of what they are doing. His character, Dr. Busner, goes on to explain that if a group is immoral, their immorality causes others to also be bad. So, in a corrupt, immoral administration, the tone is set for bad behavior by characters like Noem and Patel and Witkoff (and the entire Trump family) by the President and his close associates. In the novel, moral laxity results in direct harmful consequences (as in the Epstein story).

Self’s writing is a pleasure to read. “I remember it was dark out as I walked towards the Barbican through the sepulchral emptiness of Smithfield on a Sunday.” The novel is replete with such sentences.

And what about the humor? “After all, we’ve all known each other for years, and we don’t have any real secrets, do we?” No, I thought to myself sardonically, except what we do for a living, how much we earn, how much we have overall, who were sleeping with, what we truly, in our innermost hearts believe, together with whatever we really think about someone…and everyone.”

For satire to really bite it has to be true. I have no idea how much any of my friends are worth and I’ve known them for 60 years! And who knows what we really think in our hearts? Or how about this? “On and on she went: I suppose Joanie was attractive once, but I think she must have sampled her own breakfast pots too much; so that now she’s just another big, solid, pear-shaped Englishwoman of uncertain age, draped unsuitably in flower-patterned cotton and with a face as red as a poppy.”

Lastly, each chapter is written in a different yet fully developed voice. If you are a reader hooked on detective novel plots or page turning thrillers, this is not the book for you. But if you love good writing and enjoy

invention and satire, you will thoroughly enjoy The Quantity Theory of Morality. And, as is the case with all good satirists, Self gives us plenty to think about.