Marshall Named Washington鈥檚 Poet Laureate
Tod Marshall (鈥92, MFA creative writing) isn’t afraid of taking on passion projects to promote the arts, but his latest may be his most ambitious yet.
Marshall has dedicated himself to organizations such as Humanities Washington, which honored him with its service award in 2015. It was only fitting that he was named the Washington State Poet Laureate for a two-year term that started Feb. 1.
In April 2007, the Washington State Legislature passed a bill that recognized the value of poetry to the culture and heritage of the state by establishing the Washington State Poet Laureate.
Marshall said the idea of applying for the state鈥檚 Poet Laureate initially came to him after talking with Sam Green, the state鈥檚 first Poet Laureate. Green, a Seattle University professor, was known to hold office hours for 8-10 hours per day during his term.
鈥淪am mentioned the Poet Laureate and his dedication frightened me,鈥 Marshall said, laughing. Yet Marshall, a professor at Gonzaga University, said he was inspired by Green as a 鈥渢ireless advocate for poetry,鈥 as were Green鈥檚 Poet Laureate successors. 鈥淎ll of that amazed me and intimated me,鈥 he said.
Their approach of inclusiveness, both geographically and demographically, is a model Marshall aims to emulate as the first Poet Laureate from eastern Washington. He has been busy in his early days on the job, reading an original poem during a public ceremony at the request of Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and being honored at receptions in Spokane and Seattle.
It has been the culmination of a steady rise for Marshall in his adopted home during the past 20 years, and the time he spent studying at 51福利社 is a big part of his story.
Marshall was in a summer writing workshop at the University of Iowa in 1989 when he was advised to apply to the top graduate Master of Fine Arts programs, including Eastern. Marshall came to Spokane, sight unseen, and began learning from legendary faculty such as James McAuley, Ursula Hegi, John Keeble and Nance Van Winckel.
鈥淚t turned out to be a great decision,鈥 said Marshall. 鈥淚 received some magic opportunities there.鈥 Marshall said he was mentored and encouraged regularly by his professors and was further inspired by a series of visiting writers who held workshops and readings at 51福利社.
Marshall returned to the Midwest to get his PhD from the University of Kansas and taught briefly before coming back to Spokane.聽His newest collection of poems, Bugle, was a winner of the 2015 Washington Book Award for poetry.
He is on a roll and, while being named Poet Laureate is yet another prestigious honor, it is also different. The work is an extension of a public service ethos that is core to Marshall. He has served in the Prime Time Mentoring Program for at-risk youth in Spokane. He says that as a 鈥渂eliever鈥 in the power of poetry and the arts, his new role is a way to promote those values.
Learn more on his or read
Everyone Loves a Winner
By Pat Spanjer 鈥80
Terry Davis was scheduled to participate in the 2012 Spokane International Film Festival (SpIFF) screening of Vision Quest, but a couple of weeks before the event, he fell off a ladder in his Mankato, Minnesota, home. He sustained a head injury that landed him in intensive care on life support. Doctors told his family he would not recover, and they should prepare for his death. Davis shocked them all when he opened his eyes and beat the odds.
While Davis (鈥69 BA English) continues to suffer side effects from that injury, three brain surgeries and another head trauma in 2014, he was determined to return to Spokane this year.
On Jan. 30, 2016, SpIFF kicked off its annual event with the 30th anniversary celebration of Vision Quest, the 1985 movie based on Davis鈥 1979 novel about a Spokane teenager who embodies the wrestling culture.
More than 1,000 Vision Quest fans from across the nation flooded the Fox Theater lobby to greet Davis, Spokane legendary wrestling coach Cash Stone (the muse for the story鈥檚 coach), and Vision Quest actor Matthew Modine.
Davis鈥 high school wrestling teammates came to reminisce about the old days.
Davis was a wrestler at Shadle Park High School. 鈥淥ne of the best things about wrestling was that it didn鈥檛 depend on the coach鈥檚 opinion of you,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淚t was about you winning. If you win in practice, you get to wrestle in a match. It鈥檚 noble to be all by yourself on the mat. You鈥檙e on your own. There鈥檚 no one else to blame. You win or you lose.鈥
Modine, who played Louden Swain, Vision Quest鈥檚 main character, put an arm around Davis鈥 shoulders and told everyone, 鈥淭erry is Louden. I was playing him.鈥 Modine then gave Davis a kiss on the cheek.
Louden Swain is a creation of Davis鈥 high school self. 鈥淚 like Louden,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd Matthew (Modine) brought that kid to life.鈥
A Spokane fifth-grade teacher shook Davis鈥 hand and said, 鈥淚 just want to thank you for your writing. I use your stories to show my students how to write well.鈥
For 30 years, Davis taught English and writing, too. His r茅sum茅 includes teaching and coaching high school wrestling in Spokane, Monroe, Washington, and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He also taught at Eastern in 1981-82, Gonzaga, University of Idaho, East Carolina and Minnesota State in Mankato, where he retired in 2009.
Davis鈥 writing career was fostered at Eastern. 鈥淚 loved my time at Eastern as a student and a teacher,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淓astern is where I fell in love with learning, and my teachers nurtured that.鈥
Pat Coontz was his first writing professor. 鈥淪he was kind and supportive, and she taught us that by analysis and reading, we could become writers,鈥 Davis said.
Professor and author Pat McManus also influenced him. 鈥淗is sense of humor and his analysis of a good piece, his knowledge and his writing taught me a lot,鈥 Davis said.
One of Davis鈥 current projects is It鈥檚 a Perilous Life, a novel about a man with bipolar disorder, and how the power of love can save people. Davis knows a lot about both. Through his own perilous life experiences with bipolar disorder and traumatic brain injuries, he has been fortunate to have the amazing love and support of longtime friends, family and Vision Quest fans.
No matter how many times they see the movie, they cheer on Louden Swain/Terry Davis to win the big wrestling match at the end, which he does every time.
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