How I Wear Heels in the Rust Belt by Karen J. Weyant


EIL feature poet and today’s guest blogger Karen J. Weyant has a new book coming out, Wearing Heels in the Rust Belt, which won Main Street Rag’s annual chapbook contest. Here’s what she has to say about her book, her background, and her writing influences:

In her novel, Coal Run, Tawni O’Dell depicts an observation from a character about his sister: “Jolene gets out of the truck and starts walking across the ripped-up yard, stepping over pieces of garage door.  Thanks to her many pageant years spent picking her way across muddy fairgrounds, torn-up football fields, and rutted speedways, she can walk gracefully in high heels through just about anything.  Unfortunately, this is not a marketable skill.”

I disagree.  Yes, walking in high heels is not a line on a resume, but what is a skill is maintaining resilience in economically depressed areas.  Many struggle to learn and master a beautiful balancing act of everyday survival in dust and rust, in debris and corrosion.

The Rust Belt region of the United States is one of these areas.  This particular region has become a staple in contemporary American literature.  Often, the Rust Belt is portrayed as a region of decay, a place without hope or even a future.  Stories and poems are filled with images of closed factories, of worn out farmhouses and shredded cornfields  tucked away in rolling hills of dusty railroad tracks where abandoned boxcars come to rest.  Many writers do a wonderful job with description.  When I read their works, I feel like I am walking through bits of my hometown or driving through the gentle hills of western Pennsylvania.

However, I have always wanted to avoid the woe-is-me attitude found in many works placed in the Rust Belt region.  Often, the people, especially the women, are depicted as mere shadows who hang out in old bars or gaze wishfully at closed factories pining away for the days of strong unions and steady paychecks.  While I realize that those people do indeed exist, in my newest chapbook, Wearing Heels in the Rust Belt, (Main Street Rag) I strive to explore the many other lives of this world.  Heels is a collection that recollects the lives of young girls and women who interact with the physical landscape around them – worn farmhouses and fields, pickup trucks, old factories – in order to survive and grow from their harsh surroundings.

In Coal Run, Jolene is a fighter. Yes, she spent her teenage years under the false hope of freedom of winning county fair beauty pageants.  But in O’Dell’s book, she turns out to be a fighter.  A single mother who is also a career waitress, she never once feels sorry for herself, nor does she blame the world around her for her plight. Her choices were hers, and hers alone, and she is a stronger woman because of this resilience. If I allow myself, I can imagine that Jolene is the young girl in my poem, “Cold Snap.”  She may have been the 10-year old in my poem whose world is filled with violence, the kind of violence found in rural life that inflicts both the natural world and the general society. She may have been the 10-year-old who watched from a bedroom window, determined not to let this world suck her in.

Certainly, Wearing Heels in the Rust Belt is a journey of sorts.  The women found within its pages may be young children playing in junkyards, or women balancing in stiff jeans and spiked heels.  But there’s a quiet determination in every line, in every image of ripped beer labels, of cigarettes, of pickup trucks held together only by rust.

Cold Snap

Days after Bill Johnson’s youngest boy
        drove his truck through his family farm’s chicken coop,
I plucked feathers from the air, picked red Maple leaves
        to press between pieces of wax paper, discovered
condom wrappers caught in the thorns
        of our rose garden. Boys, my mother muttered,
picking latex from leaves, pausing only to watch me,
        a hard line creasing the band of skin between her eyes.
That October I was 10, already knew what most
        farm girls knew, that chickens without heads
didn’t dance, but twitched, that a sharp axe
        made a clean cut with little blood. Still, I jumped
when a stick snapped, when my brothers cracked
        the skulls of trout they brought home for dinner.
From the attic window, I watched the bonfires
        the Johnsons held every Saturday, listened
for the sharp pop and spray that sprang
        from beer cans, held my breath when Joey,
the second-to-oldest, grabbed a girl by a belt loop,
        pulled her close. I knew who she was.  She sold
corn at her father’s stand in town, wore her red hair
        in two braids, her jeans cuffed instead of hemmed.
In the shadows he was all flannel and fingers. He bent
        her neck back so far that I thought she would break.

You can find Wearing Heels in the Rust Belt here, and read more of Karen J. Weyant’s  poems here, at her EIL feature.  The art is by Matthew Naquin, and you can find him in the EIL Store.




3 responses to “How I Wear Heels in the Rust Belt by Karen J. Weyant”

  1. I enjoyed this poem. Terrific.

  2. The issues facing the Rust Belt remind me of the ones that the U.S. Southeast faced throughout the end of the 20th century as mills and factories closed–and while some towns have reinvented themselves by bringing in foreign manufacturers, many more have not.

    I went to tiny Newberry College in tiny Newberry South Carolina in the 1980’s, and just before I arrived for my first year, the second to last poultry processing plant closed–those were hard times.  But many of the local people I met had a resiliance that I admired–and they’ve since rebuilt the downtown around the restored Opera House.

    I look forward to reading the chapbook!  Congrats again.

  3. The issues facing the Rust Belt remind me of the ones that the U.S. Southeast faced throughout the end of the 20th century as mills and factories closed–and while some towns have reinvented themselves by bringing in foreign manufacturers, many more have not.

    I went to tiny Newberry College in tiny Newberry South Carolina in the 1980’s, and just before I arrived for my first year, the second to last poultry processing plant closed–those were hard times.  But many of the local people I met had a resiliance that I admired–and they’ve since rebuilt the downtown around the restored Opera House.

    I look forward to reading the chapbook!  Congrats again.

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