Candice Louisa Daquin was born in France, and has also lived in England, Canada and America. Daquin has worked in dance, publishing, as a psychotherapist and more recently she divides her time between teaching, editing and writing. Daquin is the author of five collections of poetry and numerous poems and reviews in magazines, websites and periodicals. Daquin was co-editor of We Will Not Be Silenced (2018) an anthology of poetry in response to the #metoo movement. This Is What Love Looks Like – Poetry by Women SMITTEN With Women is her first poetry Anthology as lead editor, and is due out October 2019 (Published by Indie Blu(e).
So what’s this Anthology all about?
This is What Love Looks Like – Poetry by Women SMITTEN with Women (SMITTEN for short) came about after Indie Blu(e) had published We Will Not Be Silenced, which was an anthology of poets throughout the world writing in response to the #metoo movement and the then Judge Kavanaugh hearings. It was the right time and the anthology went on to be an Amazon best seller.
There was something so powerful and such an incredible energy working on an anthology for the first time. Shortly afterward Indie Blu(e) asked me to work with them and I now do part time on some of their poetry publishing. I had been so positively affected by reading all these poems from writers throughout the world I wanted to see if it were possible to create another anthology but this time for women who loved women.
As a lesbian, I felt that lesbians were increasingly marginalized and invisible by the co-opting of the LGBTQ movement and I wanted to find a poetic medium to express lesbian voices that was not erotica (which many lesbian themed poetry collections were). Fortunately Indie Blu(e) backed my idea and we put the call out.
Truly I did not expect the response we received, it was so galvanizing and breathtaking to see how many women submitted and the quality of some of the work. Our youngest poet is 14 and our oldest, 87. I think that speaks volumes about the need for collections of poetry on various subjects and how it brings voices together and keeps poetry relevant and alive.
SMITTEN is due out October 2019 and we’re so excited to be part of this, because it’s already begun a really necessary poetic dialogue about the representation of emotions in poetry. For anyone, there is something lasting and beautiful to be found in this collection and it is my hope as many heterosexuals read it as lesbians and bisexuals.
Please tell us how or why you turned to writing poetry?
I wrote as a kid when I felt emotions I couldn’t put into prose. I think for the very young there is a natural doorway into poetry that sometimes we lose as adults. Poetry should be emphasized more, as once it was thought as the highest form of expression and I can see why. Having worked in publishing, teaching and psychotherapy it was always part of my life to write.
Would you offer up some of your influences – poetic and otherwise. What draws you to that work?
Shamefully I am less influenced by others than perhaps I should be. There is so much value to reading a wonderful poet for any creative and I’m sure it does permeate and percolate through to our creative sub-conscious. I tend however to write without direct influence so it’s hard to harness the exact mechanisms involved. Typically I am drawn to work that I find honest and brave. I think for me, as an ex-dancer, I find dance my greatest influence, and like music, it can produce poetry in me when I listen to and watch it. Likewise, reading a psychology book will often inspire me.
What is the relationship of your environment, your daily surroundings, to your writing?
Not as good as it should be. I work too much and never have enough time. Ideally I’d create a haven for writing and devote myself more stringently to the relationship between my environment and writing. Like many of us, I juggle multiple jobs and tasks and am lucky to get any time. Maybe if I retire in 35 years time I may have these things and I expect that is why some poets who are older are such consistently good writers. Working on SMITTEN I loved hearing the varied voices, different parts of the world, different ethnicities and cultural backgrounds, even different ways of loving. That has so much value.
What themes or traits will readers find in your work? What will they not find?
They will not find acceptance or tolerance of inequality or bigotry. As much as I may find something of value in the Bukowski and Billy Childish poets of the world, I would never embrace that inequity toward a group of people (women) and I feel strongly as a woman about being unapologetic and very honest. SMITTEN is part of this legacy, it’s lending a voice to those who usually aren’t heard very loudly.
List three favorite poets, an admirable animal, and your go-to beverage.
Oh dear! I’m terrible at listing ‘favorites’ because honestly, it changes all the time. I read a LOT of poetry so for today I can say, Anne Sexton is always up there, I recently re-read a lot of Tennyson and he’s always influential and lastly, I love the Metaphysical poetry movement of the 20’s and just finished a book on those authors – too numerous to mention. In SMITTEN I was absolutely blown away by our 14 year old’s poem. It gave me faith. That poetry has a real future. Equally, I loved that a woman who is 87 is still writing and has an entire history in her words. We also have three Native American poets, who are absolutely superb. Can I put those instead of the admirable animal and go-to-beverage? (Whale/Tonic Water).
And your creative process? Could you offer us a glimpse into how your poems develop from first glimmer to fully realized piece? Do you follow a regular writing routine? Do you listen to music while writing? Write in public or in solitude?
Wonderful news! And a great achievement!
Beautiful
Reblogged this on cabbagesandkings524 and commented:
Candice Louisa Daquin (TheFeatheredSleep) talks about her coming anthology of poems by women, and a bit about her life and writing.
YEAY!!!!!!!! Congrats, I know you will sell thousands, millions!
This was very interesting to read. Kudos on this project!!! I love that there is such a vast age range and background of contributors.
I think you are correct that as a young person, there is a natural door into poetry. There are emotions and feelings that we haven’t lived enough to understand, and we try and put them into words, perhaps to make some sense of them.
Dear Karen. I so appreciate you taking the time to read this. Thank you. You are right, young people have this uncanny knack to put into words those feelings they may not have even experienced sufficiently but somehow they know them. It doesn’t have to be lost to us, as we get a bit older, but sometimes it is. I hope it never is completely lost.
ha ha ha! Well not sure about millions but how wonderful it would be to do well on it and many read the gorgeous work therein? I hope you will be one my friend. I love your pic btw.
Thank you Bob for this reblog. I am hoping so much people buy this.
Thank you dearest Bob
Gosh – thank you. That made me tear up. I suppose congrats from you means so much to me, I feel really good when I think you are proud of me. Maybe that is silly but I hold you in such high regard so that is why. Thank you so much. I hope to send you a copy.
I’ll promote as well as I can, and review as agreed.
🙂
I learned a lot about not you but what you have done and achieved outside the poetry world, and what you’ve been through too. You deserve to get some recognition, if any of us ‘deserve’ anything 🙂
Thanks
Candice, I’m just seeing this…a year later. How wonderful for you! I hope that this has reached many people. You are such an accomplished person. Kudos to you!!! And Congratulations, a little late!! 😉
Thank you so much my friend 💕