Saturday, June 27, 2015

Sundin Richards, 1973–2015

Contributed by Andrew Haley

Sundin Richards took his own life on June 19 in Salt Lake City. He was 42 years old. He was a true blue poet, nascitur non fit; a self-styled poète maudit whose great humor, wrath, intellect, and charm will be long remembered.

Winner of the 1999 Utah Writers Contest for poetry, and twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize, Richards served as associate editor of Girls with Insurance and poetry editor of Jumping Blue Gods, authored The Hurricane Lamp (Otis Nebula 2010), and published dozens of poems in, among other journals, The Colorado Review, Western Humanities Review, Interim, Cur.ren.cy, Thrush, Zone, Volt, Cricket Online Review, Etudes, and Sugar House Review. Thankfully, many of those poems are still available online, and although Richards had a love-hate relationship with his name, it makes for easy Googling. He leaves behind numerous unpublished works and works-in-progress.

Fearless, witty, wise cracking, bar fighting, loyal, loving, drug-bent, drunk, charming, and often crazed, his public persona was that of a kind of gentleman rogue from the 1940s given a punk rock acid bath. He had excellent posture, tucked in his shirt, which if it wasn't collared was a fresh white tee; he spoke smartly with a singing, enunciated tenor that sounded almost accented but wasn’t, and comported himself from his teens onward like a sexagenarian combat vet, which he wasn't, wearing long wool coats and polished boots, using Zippos and keeping his face closely shaved. He was emulating his grandfathers, both WW2 heroes whom he revered, and rejecting the entire zeitgeist of the hippy generation, which he hated for many reasons, principal of which was the nightmarish child abuse he suffered at the hands of his father. 
Sundin reads at Ken Sanders Rare Books, 2011.
Born in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, Richards grew up between there and Helper, Utah. He studied poetry at the Naropa Institute in 1991 before moving to Salt Lake the following year. Apart from a short spell in Southern Oregon, he lived the remaining 23 years of his life within walking distance of downtown

He attended the University of Utah, where he took Margot Schilpp's creative writing class, and apprenticed himself to a newly arrived Donald Revell. Though he read everything he could get his hands on, the colossal books, the challenges—The Prelude, The Cantos, The Maximus Poems—as well as the obscure little treasures, he never graduated. Ill-suited to the sycophancy and discipline of life as an undergraduate, he preferred the downtown bars or the small bookstores, The Den and Marginalian, long gone now, where he befriended a generation of Utah poets: Glenn Parker, Stefene Russell, Richard Cronshey, Andrea Perkins, Andrea Robison, Dawn Corrigan, Mary Fisher, Calvin Jolley, and others. 

Parker’s suicide in 1994 galvanized the friendship of Richards, Russell, Cronshey, and Perkins. The four of them started Salt For Zombies, a reading series that sought to revive audiences from what the quartet saw as a kind of living death. They also frequented Sandy Anderson’s City Art readings in the basement of the Mount Tabor Lutheran Church, where they often read. 

Around 1997, things took a turn for the worse. Richards all but abandoned school, his brawling, drinking, and drug use escalated, and after Perkins left him, he was arrested and imprisoned for threatening a date of hers with a handgun. On his release, he, Cronshey, Russell, and Richard Moore edited and published Bird Full of Rain, a collection of Parker’s work, and Richards wrote the poems that would win the Utah Writers Contest and subsequently appear in Western Humanities Review.  

It was a momentous period. His imprisonment earned Richards the lifelong bonafides of his bar-fighter persona, while his inclusion in the respected, if conservative, WHR, where Richard Howard was poetry editor, gave him a new kind of pedigree in academic circles and vindicated his conduct as an enfant terrible. More publications followed.

In his forward to Bird Full of Rain, Richards wrote of Parker, “Glenn understood that the struggle for becoming was all important and the process of becoming was paramount. He knew the singing was no mend for the wounding and that this was a good thing.” This becoming possessed Richards for the remainder of life. He wrote and read enormous amounts, drank himself puffy, worked menial jobs, and continued to publish while living in those beautiful old apartments in Salt Lake City with radiators and windowed porches that were built in a time when there was still dignity in being poor.

Sundin in downtown Salt Lake City, 2015. Photo credit: Clint Wardlow.
His sophisticated, erudite poems transcended high- and lowbrow vernaculars, mixing blue-collar machismo with Sumerian myth in a voice that could snarl in street idiom in one line while offering great tenderness and beauty in the next. In The Hurricane Lamp, he gave Helper the kind of cynical, attentive edifying Charles Olsen gave Gloucester, Mass. In Hurricane, and elsewhere, Richards’ poems are machined and parsimoniously edited, running in narrow columns often only a few syllables wide in an accomplished style that draws on Williams, Olsen, Creeley, and Pound without being slavish to them. 

He wrote by typewriter in the early morning, often after a hard night out. But he had the discipline of both will and intellect to cull cheap narcissism from his poems. He hated confessional poetry and lazy poetry and stuck to the old maxims of the early and midcentury avant-garde, abjuring politics and the identity poetics that have come into the mainstream. 

Though he wrote and published with abundance over the last fifteen years, honing his style, coming to favor a masterful punctuation built of line breaks, and pursuing at times a wistfulness borne of many love affairs and attentive study of old masters, he may have considered the poems that won the Utah Writers Contest among his finest. “Late Spring,” the closing poem of Hurricane, is drawn from those. He wrote, in a period of great brutality and consequence, of loss and new love, what could be his epitaph,

“I throw my flesh into steel’s
storied brand and spread out in a wind
where animals shudder and love the light.”

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Andrew Haley knew Sundin Richards for more than twenty years. Andrew is the author of Good Eurydice (Otis Nebula, 2011), as well as two other unpublished poetry collections, and four unpublished novels: Octopus (2003), Liar (2004), Transference (2005), and Ultramar (2008). He is currently writing a collection of short stories titled Signals and a fifth novel titled Roland. Haley and Ivana Gamarnik co-translated Lola Arias’ play Mi Vida Despues, published in a bilingual edition in Buenos Aires in 2009. He and Sybil Perez co-translated Roberto Bolaño’s final interview, which appeared in Roberto Bolaño: The Last Interview & Other Conversations (Melville House, 2009). You can see his poetry in places like Kill Author, BlazeVOX, Sugar House Review, Girls With Insurance, Otis Nebula, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Quarterly West, Zone, and GoodFoot.

13 comments:

  1. Thank you for this. Very glad to see some tributes appearing slowly.

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  2. Thank you for this eloquent, beautiful memorial of an eloquent, beautiful man.

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  3. Sundin ... you helped get me through an aweful heartbreak. You were a great friend.

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  4. Sundin ... you helped get me through an aweful heartbreak. You were a great friend.

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  5. Sundin ... you helped get me through an aweful heartbreak. You were a great friend.

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  6. While all of you celebrate this man, I will curse him with every breath. Richards was a monster who emotionally and physically abused women. He was arrested seven times within a 12 month period in southern Oregon for assaulting his girlfriend (look him up on "Medford MugShots.com) This woman was a beautiful person - she was a mother to two young biys, an attorney, a bookstore owner, a musician. Richards stalked her constantly and when she would relent and allow him back in her life he would beat her. She desperately wanted to get away from him but he would always find her. His final act of horrible psychological abuse was to ask her to marry him; she said Yes, and on the morning of their wedding Richards left her literallly waiting at the alter - he did not show up at the Justice of the Peace because he had killed himself earlier that morning. Five days later, she took her own life. Anyone who thinks that this is romantic is as sick as both of them were. She was beautiful. She was sick. When someone takes their own life I usually consider it to be the manifestation of a physiologic mental illness - No Shame No Blame - but in this case all the blame goes to Richards.

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  7. We prefer the myth to reality maybe because on a fundamental level we've decided reality isn't viable, and this despair is contagious, and we call that contagion culture and worship it and so we miss the only chance we have. You all go ahead and stick with that. I've got better things to do. Rich Cronshey

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  9. Your article has proven useful to me. It’s very informative and you are obviously very knowledgeable in this area. You have opened my eyes to varying views on this topic with interesting and solid content.

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  10. When I buy a cup of coffee, I still pour out the first sip on the ground for Sundin.

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