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CAS Chronicles

"Sentimental Evening" by Natalie Scenters-Zapico

English professor featured in 'Best American Poetry'

By Dakota Galvin, College of Arts and Sciences

Natalie Scenters-Zapico, an award-winning poet and assistant professor in the Department of English, is gaining global recognition. Scenters-Zapico, who shapes the local literary community as director of the Michael Kuperman Memorial Poetry Library, has a poem in the prestigious “Best American Poetry” anthology, cementing her work as essential reading at °ϲĻϢand for audiences across the country.

“I wanted to capture the delirious pain and confusion I had at our systems of documenting births in this country. I also wanted to capture my delirious joy that (my son) was born safely,” Scenters-Zapico said.

Scenters-Zapico’s work has appeared in several notable literary publications, including “POETRY,” “The Kenyon Review,” “Ploughshares” and “The Paris Review.” Her book “Lima :: Limón” won Yale University’s Windham-Campbell Prize in 2021. But she says being featured in “Best American Poetry” holds special meaning for her.

“It is a deep honor to be in ’Best American Poetry 2024’ and to be selected by a poet I deeply admire like this year’s editor Mary Jo Salter. I think the most exciting thing about being in ’Best American Poetry’ is knowing that your work will be read by a wider readership than usual and taught in classes. What more could you ask for as a poet?”

“Best American Poetry” has been a cornerstone of the poetry world since its inception in 1988, showcasing the finest poets from across the U.S. Each year, a guest editor curates 50-75 poems, highlighting the richness and diversity of American poetry.

Scenters-Zapico’s piece, “Sentimental Evening,” was drafted during the first week of her son’s birth and aims to capture the complex feelings surrounding early motherhood.

Scenters-Zapico

Scenters-Zapico read her work at this year's Trail Blazers event. Photo by Corey Lepak

“I wanted to capture the delirious pain and confusion I had at our systems of documenting births in this country. I also wanted to capture my delirious joy that he was born safely. In the poem, I play with the idea that writing about motherhood, especially early motherhood, is often seen as sentimental and unserious. In this poem, I try to complicate that bias for myself and, in turn, for my readers,” she said.

Scenters-Zapico’s advice for aspiring writers wanting to be published in major publications like “Best American Poetry” is: Don’t give up.

“If you don’t believe in your work, no one else will. Keep working on your craft every day like it’s a job and believe your poems will get better. Because ultimately, it should always be about making the poems better — recognitions are just a nice nod but shouldn’t ever be the goal when you sit down to write,” she advised.

She also urges aspiring writers to value the unique attributes that exist in poetry.

“Poetry is in many ways contradictory to the current culture. It values vulnerability, contradiction, and stasis. It is because of this, though, that poetry has the power to truly change the way that people think because it requires that people read in a way that forces them to engage the page and then the world and others in new ways.”  

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CAS Chronicles is the monthly newsletter for the °ϲĻϢ's College of Arts and Sciences, your source for the latest news, research, and events at CAS.