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Paul Willis Strikes ‘Losing Streak’ with New Collection

The former Santa Barbara Poet Laureate discusses his latest collection of work and will do an appearance at Chaucer’s Books on May 15.

Paul Willis Strikes ‘Losing Streak’ with New Collection

Paul Willis, an emeritus professor of English at Westmont College, served as Santa Barbara’s fourth Poet Laureate, from 2011 to 2013. He is the author of a number of poetry collections, most recently Losing Streak, which he’ll sign at Chaucer’s Books on Wednesday, May 15, at 6 p.m. Fellow former Santa Barbara Poet Laureate David Starkey spoke to Willis about his newest collection of poetry, which was primarily written during the COVID pandemic “to cheer himself.”

‘Losing Streak’ is the new poetry collection by Paul J. Willis | Photo: Courtesy

Christianity is central to your life and identity, but those who attend your secular readings are likely to get just a hint of that. Can you talk about writing poetry as a Christian who hopes to reach a wide variety of readers? I suspect, for example, that for you the natural world is a manifestation of God’s glory. I am very much a Christian, yes, but while the call of a preacher is to proclaim, the call of an artist is to embody. This spring, some of us had the privilege of meeting Noel Paul Stookey (of the ’60s folk group Peter, Paul, and Mary), who is himself a professing Christian. As an artist, however, he told us he feels a responsibility to communicate through metaphor. I guess I feel the same way. Like Gerard Manley Hopkins and Flannery O’Connor, I have a fairly sacramental sense of the world. Anything and anyone — not just the pretty parts of nature — can be a vessel of God’s grace.

Though you’ve written many profound and serious poems, you’ve always had a partiality for light verse, as evidenced in your new book. What role does humor and comedy play in your poetry? I have never sat down and said to myself, “I will now write a funny poem.” But more often than not, as a poem evolves, incongruities arise — the sort of incongruities that sometimes evoke laughter. I’ve always thought of poetry as a form of play, whether the result is something quite solemn or truly silly. Of course, humor can be profound in its own right — one of the divine mysteries of this world.


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