MANKATO —
When Scott Welvaert shared one of his first short stories with a group of other writers at Minnesota State University in the mid-1990s, they had one piece of advice for him: Try poetry.
Welvaert had started college planning to study engineering but had turned to creative writing when he realized that his math skills weren’t as strong as they needed to be. He had written short stories in high school and thought that he had a knack for it — especially after telling a story that made his professor, Terry Davis, tear up. But his writing group didn’t necessarily agree.
“Basically, they told me that my story wasn’t very well crafted,” Welvaert said. “They told me to try writing poetry, because it would teach me how to use the language better and how to use imagery better. They said if you can write poetry well, then that will translate over to your fiction as well.”
Welvaert started writing poetry and found a passion for the form — but he couldn’t shake his desire to tell stories as well. So when he was accepted into MSU’s master of fine arts creative writing program, he combined the two and wrote a thesis that told the story of two AIDS patients on a journey to see the Pacific Ocean through a collection of poems.
That poetic story, “Pacific,” was published earlier this month by Minneapolis-based Sol Books.
Each poem in “Pacific” tells a small part of the story of David and Marti — young lovers with AIDS who have decided to drive west from Minnesota to the Pacific Ocean. There are poems that help explain who they both are and who they’re leaving behind, and others that describe their journey and their adventures along the way.
Although the book is arranged chronologically, Welvaert says it wasn’t written that way.
“It actually started with one of the last poems, with them in a hospital in Oregon,” he says. “After I wrote it, those two people just seemed interesting to me, so I started writing more poems. And then the story became more clear to me.”
Although the poems involve many images and ideas from his own life, he had never taken the journey his characters were embarking on. So he laid out a big map and started marking the places they would visit during their trip: Reliance, S.D., the Black Hills, Devil’s Tower in Wyoming, even Harrison Ford’s ranch near Jackson, Wyo.
“I’m a huge Harrison Ford fan,” Welvaert admits. “I knew he had a house near there, and I thought that he deserved a poem. Now one of my catch phrases when I tell people about the book is, ‘Harrison Ford is in it!’”
Welvaert finished the collection before he finished his MFA in 2001. He tried briefly to find a publisher for it, but then got busy with his full-time job in marketing and the children’s adventure novels that he started writing. But last year, he got a call from Blake Hoena, one of his classmates at MSU who was now working as the editorial director for Sol Books.
“Blake called and said that he was going to publish my book,” Welvaert says. “So I said, ‘OK.’”
Although Welvaert now spends most of his writing time working on novels for children, he still appreciates the freedom that poetry affords a storyteller. In prose, he explains, readers expect the author to fill in the gaps of a story — but in a collection of poetry, those gaps can stand on their own.
“The audience has to use their imagination to fill in the gaps,” he explains. “They’re telling the story to themselves, figuring out what happened and filling in the gaps instead of being told what they are by the author.”
Currents
Poetry is his passion
Scott Welvaert writes of love and loss
- Currents
-
-
Keeping the saddle warm
Clothed in a pair of decrepit cowboy boots, dusty blue jeans, a western style shirt, and a 10-gallon hat with a thick mustache resting below the nose, folk musician Pop Wagner is a man who seems to have rode horseback onto stage from the bright eye o
-
Entertainment Calendar
Today Author John Thavis “The Vatican Diaries” Q&A -- 6:30 p.m., Barnes & Noble, 1850 Adams St., Mankato, 345-3444. Blue Earth County Library storytime -- 10:30 a.m., Blue Earth County Library, 100 E. Main St., Mankato, free,
-
MSU grad to continue Broadway run in 'Once'
The story continues for Claire Wellin, the 2008 musical theatre graduate from the Minnesota State University Department of Theatre & Dance, who appeared on Broadway in April and May in the Tony Award-winning musical “Once.” She has been told that sh
-
'In Stitches': Bethany theatre costumes on display
'In Stitches' will be on exhibit through May 29 at the Twin Rivers Council for the Arts Gallery.
-
Fall of faith
I 35W Bridge Survivor Recounts Falling 60 Feet For Lois Welman, plummeting 60 feet during rush hour traffic when Interstate 35W’s Mississippi River Bridge collapsed on Aug. 1, 2007 -- killing 13 people and injuring 144 individuals -- was essentially
-
Partner art
ST. PETER -- Charlie Putnam and Le Ann Gehring-Ryan don't share a studio. They very seldom paint together and don't really share influences. Yet there are similarities between the artistic couple. For starters, both are teachers. Putnam has taught ar
- Exhibits Arts Center of St. Peter — Paintings by Charlie Putnam and Le Ann Gehring-Ryan, Friday through June 16 at 315 S. Minnesota Ave., St. Peter. Hours: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 1-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Blue Earth County Library, M
-
Links to cancer still mixed for low-calorie, high-protein soy beans
Q: I have heard a lot about how healthy soy foods are for me, and that I should be eating or drinking them, but I am a bit leery because of all the talk about soy and breast cancer. Is soy a good choice, or should I avoid it? A: Soybeans are a widely
-
Ain't no sunshine when she's gone
MANKATO — There are those people in life whose unyielding kindness and warmth lift up those around them, whose focus is always outward — never on themselves. Lois Jaeger, fine arts director at Bethany Lutheran College, is certainly one of those peopl
-
Cooking 101: Dana Elliott, chef, to lead Taste of Home Cooking show
MANKATO -- Dana Elliott has given interviews about food all over the country. As a seven-year "seasoned" veteran of the Taste of Home Cooking School -- as the Indianapolis chef expert wittily characterizes herself -- Elliott delivers simple, easy-to-
- More Currents Headlines
-


