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Micros from Martone’s Memoir

by Michael Martone
[Three pieces from Michael Martone’s new project—a memoir in prose poems.]

 

Cake
I-35, Iowa
1983

Iowa State University lent me a car (I didn’t have a car) to go to the Des Moines airport to pick up Czeslaw Milosz and drive him back to Ames for a lecture and a reading. A Polish math professor went with me. On the trip there, we talked about the work in the fields. Milosz had just won the Nobel Prize, and on the way back, I pointed out the harvested and turned fields on both sides of the highway. The dirt looks like chocolate cake, he said. The math professor in the back seat said then that they were going to speak in Polish now, and they did all the rest of the way back to Ames. I understood nothing.

Spade

Cambridge
1990

Everyone thinks Harvard University is rich, but it is cheap when it comes to phones. My office at 34 Kirkland Street was next to Seamus Heaney’s, and we shared a party line that rang all the time. The calls were almost always for him from all over the world. I took messages, and when he returned, we would have lunch in his office to review them. We would also talk about gardens, and how we missed having one in the city. When I left to take a new job in a city where I could have a garden, Seamus gave me a garden spade, a ribbon around its handle which is, after all these years and many gardens, still there, hanging by a few threads.

X-Acto
Syracuse
1993

During the small talk at dinner that night, I wanted to ask Louise Gluck about the X-Acto knife. Her father, I thought, had invented it for use as a scalpel, but it couldn’t be cleaned. We had been talking about the white space between the print in a collage. I mentioned Francis Ponge and how she was interested in every day objects like soap and knives. Louise cut in right there: “She, she said, “wasn’t a she but a he.” Right then dessert arrived.

 

Recently retired after 40 years of teaching, Michael Martone’s new book, PLAIN AIR: SKETCHES FROM WINESBURG, INDIANA, will be published by Baobab Books in 2022.

 

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What surprising, fascinating stuff can you tell us about the origin, drafting, and/or final version of these three micro-memoir pieces?

I now have nearly 100 of these micro memoirs. These three were written in August of 2021 for the August Poetry Postcard Fest. So they were written to specifically fit on a postcard and since they were about mundane meetings with famous writers, I composed them on a mechanical typewriter. I consider myself, of course, a “minor” writer and think of minor in musical terms. So I think of these pieces as duets with major and minor keys.

News

Check out the write-up of the journal in The Writer.

Matter Press recently released titles from Meg Boscov, Abby Frucht, Robert McBrearty, Tori Bond, Kathy Fish, and Christopher Allen. Click here.

Matter Press is now offering private flash fiction workshops and critiques of flash fiction collections here.

Submissions

Poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction/prose poetry submissions are now closed. The reading period for standard submissions opens again September 15, 2025. Submit here.

Upcoming

06/10 • Grace Keir
06/15 • Alexandria Peary
06/22 • Kel Rocha
06/29 • Chao Wang
07/06 • Adrian Potter
07/13 • TBD
07/20 • TBD
07/27 • TBD
08/03 • TBD
08/10 • TBD
08/17 • TBD
08/24 • TBD
08/31 • TBD
09/07 • TBD
09/14 • TBD
09/21 • TBD