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Hiding from Salesmen by Scott Poole & illustrated by Robert Helm

Hiding from Salesmen by Scott Poole & illustrated by Robert Helm

88 pp    ISBN 0-9717265-2-3    (hardcover)    $24.95

ForeWord Magazine Feature on Scott Poole's Hiding From Salesmen

Scott Poole's latest book of poetry from Lost Horse Press, HIDING FROM SALESMEN, was being featured in POETRY FORESIGHT in the May/June edition of ForeWord Magazine. This issue was distributed at Book Expo America and American Library Association's annual meeting in addition to reaching the magazine's 20,000+ captive audience of acquisition librarians and booksellers, including the head buyers at Borders, Barnes and Noble and other chains.

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The Sexy Shakers

Shaker architecture is as simple as sex.
Two naked elms in a field wait to be
wooden bowls filled with light.
Each scratch visible.
Staircases. The sound of rising and descending steps
into clouds of bleached wood.
Rows upon rows of plain drawers without labels.
Skylit room.

All doors are open. The hinges greased.
Cold air dances without music.
A Shaker house is as sexual as a waiting skillet.

I don't care what you think.
The Shakers are the sexiest people.

All their chairs are empty.

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praise

Did You Hear The One About The Giraffe?

Also reinforcing its messages with humor is a new collection by Scott Poole, Hiding From Salesmen. The poems, funny and strange in tone, are illustrated with intriguing black-and-white sketches. The poet, Associate Director of Eastern Washington University Press, treats a poem like a good joke: it’s all about the delivery. If a reader agrees to follow the giraffe hiding quietly from salesmen, the champagne and nudity at the MRI, and the loaf of bread in crisis, then the payoff is laughs and fresh insight into human nature. His poem, “Turkey In Phoenix,” reads, “A man lures a turkey into his Subaru / and rolls up the windows. / It’s Phoenix—the day before Thanksgiving. / Sweat is already forming on the windshield. / His family is coming. Maybe he could get away / in his little car of hope / if the turkey wasn’t already in there.”
---ForeWord Magazine
April/May 2004

"Hiding from Salesmen is a collection of wry poems by Scott Poole that mix humor with quizzical insight and a dash of the fantastic. Black and white surrealist illustrations by Robert Helm enhance this unforgettable collection."
---The Midwest Book Review

Experiencing Scott Poole's poems is like visiting inside the human brain. His words pulse with electric life, and carry the reader on a torrent of wonderful energy to encounter marvel after marvel. A narrator grows corn inside his garage, another person bounces basketballs off a Rodin sculpture, a man sticks his foot into a coal mine on a Spring day permitting hundreds of tiny miners to escape.  A sensitivity quivering with the terror and joy of existence inhabits this poetry. A man temporarily abandons replacing a broken automobile starter to savor "the perfection of babies." Another realizes that living beings posses a power such "that death / can't completely inhabit the body." Poole's words would convince anyone that our species will endure and triumph. Humorous, thoughtful, and vibrating with magic, the poems of Hiding from Salesmen are simultaneously vehicle, idea, organic compound and music. The future of poetry---hey, the future of humanity---is in good hands if it's in Scott Poole's hands."
---Tom Wayman

Scott Poole's poems are witty, terse, irreverent, sad, and, mostly, totally unexpected. Hiding from Salesmen---such a great title, signals, accurately, original, delightful."
---Diana O'Hehir

It would be simple enough if all Poole were interested in was comic resistance to certain death-pulls in our culture. Instead, his speaker---a husband, a father, someone grateful for "reality's green backyard"---looks everywhere for signs of nobility and magic in human life. He finds it at a girl's soccer game, at the river's edge where lovers meet for picnics, at the scene of a terrorist attack. Under the beam of an MRI, the huge machine circling round him, "I let it register my love of baseball, / the friend I saved from drowning. . . / And I hoped / something greater than me / might show up on the screen." Just as the instrument searches within, the poems in Poole's book look out, tracking what is beautiful, useful, and true.
---Richard Robbins

Making A Scene


by Sheri Boggs, The Pacific Northwest Inlander

There's no denying the fact that many of the images in Scott Poole's poetry are quietly hilarious. In one, it's a slice of lunchmeat suddenly giving rise to thoughts of Andy Warhol. In another, a man comforts himself post-vasectomy "holding a bag of frozen peas in one hand and a bottle of painkillers in the other." And in yet another, a narrator contemplates all sorts of grisly medieval revenge upon the car that has suddenly stranded him outside The Dalles. But to call his poetry "funny" seems a rather risky proposition. Not because the poet is in any way dangerous, but because "funny" is such a limiting word for describing what it is that Poole does.

"There's not a lot of humorous poetry out there. There's been a bit of a renaissance in the last couple of years — for instance Billy Collins, the poet laureate, writes humorous poetry. But up until now, most light verse has been simply light. It's not deeply felt material," he says. "I write how I think, which tends toward the humorous, but at the same time, I've always had this darker, more serious side."

In his new book Hiding from Salesmen (from which he reads on Tuesday night at Auntie's) and in his debut collection The Cheap Seats, Poole has shown a keen ability for conjuring up what feel like miniature short stories, using seemingly disparate elements and a healthy appreciation for the absurd. Take the poem "Why I Love My Garage Door Opener," in which the speaker decides to grow corn in his garage as "a cure for dumbness." The speaker is suddenly musing on whales and how they might dream of corn, and playing with his garage door opener the way he imagines a whale might blink its enormous eyes. It's a leap, but in Poole's hands it becomes much more than just fiddling around with illogicalities.

In fact, this poem and the others that comprise Hiding from Salesmen exhibit a subtle intelligence. While whoever's speaking might be willing to play the "fool" card over and over again, there is a sense of overriding wisdom in that the things that are truly important — love, family, friendships, work — are a constant no matter what craziness ensues.

Poole's verse is so well wrought, and his ability to combine the embarrassing and the sublime is so well-developed, it's hard to believe his introduction to poetry was almost accidental. As a psych major at WSU, he happened to take a writing elective from Carlos Sanchez.

"He was kind of the grandfather of Chicano poetry in the U.S.," says Poole. "He was by far the most inspiring teacher I've ever had."

Poole switched majors and stayed on another year at WSU. He got his Master of Fine Arts degree from Eastern and took over the helm of EWU Press when its long-standing director James McAuley retired in 1998. That same year, Poole and his colleague Christine Holbert launched the first Get Lit! festival, where Poole read a few of his poems and ended up getting a publisher on the spot.

"All these people, some of them editors and publishers, were coming up afterwards and saying all these great things, and then Christine marches up and goes, 'I want to publish your book.' "

Holbert's Lost Horse Press published The Cheap Seats, and Poole went on about his work of making Spokane a safe place for poetry to live. Get Lit! will celebrate its fifth year this spring and is already on the brink of gaining national recognition. In addition to his continuing work with the EWU Press, Poole has a weekly poetry newsletter and records his poems for broadcast on KPBX every Monday morning during Morning Edition.

"I thought they'd put me on in the middle of the BBC broadcasts, like between 1:01 and 1:02 in the morning," says Poole. "But they've got me on during drive time, which is pretty cool."

Pretty cool, indeed. It's safe to say that his poems are heard by thousands of people every Monday, and he routinely hears from people who remember not only specific images from his work, but sometimes even entire passages. But even though his verbal inventions are sometimes breathtaking, in fact, even though he can take a simple Monopoly game and turn it into a sweetly affecting love poem, he remains a study in self-deprecation.

"I've always felt that there are two kinds of poetry. There's the big, beautiful kind with important ideas and Shakespearean language," he jokes. "And then there's the kind that I'm good at."

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about the author

Scott PooleScott Poole is the associate director of Eastern Washington University Press. His first book, The Cheap Seats, was a finalist for Forward Magazine's Book of the Year awards. He lives with his family in Spokane, Washington where his work can be heard every Monday morning on KPBX 91.1, Spokane Public Radio. You can learn more about Scott Poole in recent articles on CBS.com, CNN.com and on his website, www.spocom.com/users/spoole/.

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