It is a rankling challenge to state pride.
Surely California has no less literary talent or affection for the written word than Arkansas, Wyoming or the other 19 states that have official bards.
It is a rankling challenge to state pride.
Surely California has no less literary talent or affection for the written word than Arkansas, Wyoming or the other 19 states that have official bards.
Yet with the deadline looming Tuesday, just 10 nominations have come in for the now formal post of California poet laureate, about one-third the number expected.
Program organizers blame the muted response mostly on a time crunch in publicizing the job, which came into being on Jan. 1.
Even they wonder, however, if leading California poets have concluded that the laureate title will bring more headaches than rewards. The post has already been fried on talk radio and newspaper editorial pages (in verse, naturally) as frivolous and irrelevant.
"There's been a circus atmosphere around this thing," said Paul Minicucci, assistant director of the California Arts Council, which is overseeing the poet laureate program. "If I were a world-class poet, I'm thinking I don't need the validation from this and I don't want to be the butt of jokes. There's adversity written all over this thing."
California has had chief poets--and chief-poet controversies--since 1915, but before last year never specified their qualifications, duties or term limits.
Political cronyism often outweighed literary merit in their designation. In 1966, the Legislature named former Assemblyman Charles B. "Gus" Garrigus--then unpublished and best known for commemorating each legislative session in verse--poet laureate for life, enraging the poetry establishment.
Garrigus died in 2000, opening the door for a new kind of poet laureate, codified in a bill passed last September.
California poet laureates must have lived in the state for at least 10 years and achieved prominence through a published body of work. Nominations must come from college literature departments, poetry societies or other experts.
In return for a small stipend and money for expenses, laureates must give at least six public readings and take on a project, perhaps coordinating with the U.S. poet laureate. They may serve no more than two two-year terms.
Even with the elaborate new rules, finding a poet who can speak for and to 34 million Californians remains a delicate proposition.
The state's literary structure mirrors its sprawling geography: Multiple regional centers have flourished, but no single spot holds clear sway. The Northern California poetry klatch has little to do with its southern counterpart and vice versa.