On Getting a Poetry MFA: an Interview with Michele Bombardier

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This interview with Michele is one of three posts on the site that were written for The MFA Project in fall/winter 2015, prior to the start of Primal School. 

I first met Michele Bombardier at the recent Poets on the Coast conference with Susan Rich and Kelli Russell Agodon in La Conner, WA, an event in which time slows for art, women gather with their words, and poetry is a nymph dancing wildly on the Skagit River for three packed days. She was glowing so brightly I asked her out to lunch…and this interview happened. — Hannah

Tell us a little about your MFA experience. Specifically, let’s talk about pros and cons: what are some good reasons to pursue an MFA in creative writing? What are some of the challenges?

It was an agonizing decision. I have a perfectly good graduate degree and career, so I was not interested in an MFA to become a teacher; my goal was, and still is, to deepen my craft. I also felt the pressure of time. I am 55 years old, and even though I have been writing for a while now, I am relatively late to the party. My hope was that an MFA program would compress my learning curve to a steep incline.

The con is pretty simple: money. I have three college-age kids. We put one through, one just started, and one stopped but hopes to return. We are middle class. This is hard stuff. We ended up taking a loan against the house. Call me crazy.

If I didn’t get an MFA I would have continued doing what I have been doing for the past five years: taking classes at Hugo House, the community writing center here in Seattle, meeting with my writing groups, working with editors/teachers I’ve hired to review and critique my work, and attending conferences where I could, though those can get pretty spendy.

What advice would you offer to poets and students of writing who aren’t part of an MFA program? How might they structure and self-direct their writing education?

Find mentors. I took David Wagoner’s Master Poetry class multiple times at Hugo House and was incredibly grateful for those experiences. I’ve also studied with Tara HardyKelli Russell AgodonGary Copeland Lilley and Wyn Cooper. I think it’s also important for writers to attend classes and form writing groups. The classes and groups come and go, but over time, you find your poet-siblings who will help raise your work. I love working with my friends Lillo Way and Ken Wagner, whom I met in David Wagoner’s course, and they still kick my poetic ass. 

What have you been up to these days, and what are you working on now? 

I’ve cut back my day job to ¾ time so I go into the office for three long days and have two glorious days dedicated to my writing, in addition to the weekends. I read an hour or so every evening and before work. I’m a recluse, a recent empty-nester and married to a professor/researcher who is always reading, and so this fits our lifestyle perfectly. I spend a solid 25 hours a week on my study of poetry, though a lot of that is also spent staring out the window.

I am reading a lot of international poets like KamienskaZagajewskiSwirMilosz and some anthologies. Other new favorites are Brigit Pegeen KellyIlya Kaminsky and Deborah Digges. I’m trying to write poems about my work as a therapist, but I’m easily distracted and keep writing poems about that domestic drama otherwise known as my pesky children.

Please “teach” us! Assign us some reading and/or homework, maybe a writing prompt.

Two things from my program that has rocked my world that you can easily replicate on your own:

1. Write a statement on your poetics. One full page, double spaced.

2. Make a list of 20 books of poetry that are recommended by a variety of poets/blogs/teachers. Read a book a week and then write up a 2-4 page critique addressing craft, tone, voice, arc, etc. Basically, what moved you and why.

3. After you’ve done 20 books, revisit assignment #1. Rinse and repeat.

That assignment certainly isn’t for the faint-hearted! Any parting shots?

The MFA is a great excuse to get out of social obligations. 

Michele Bombardier is a Northwest poet with nearly twenty publications in journals such as Floating BridgeThe Examined Life JournalFreshwater and SukoonShe is a speech-language pathologist serving persons with stroke, traumatic brain injury and autism. Michele is pursuing an MFA in poetry at Pacific University.