Archipel: The newsletter

Welcome to Archipel — a living archive of interviews, essays and creative resources drawn from my Substack newsletter. I profile creatives about their creative process and community, while sharing the tides that shape my practice: hybridity, translation and the art of sustaining a creative life.

Archipel is also an act of reciprocity — a way to give back to the people and communities who have kept me afloat while I was working, mothering, moving, witnessing, writing, and not writing. I hope a piece of Archipel meets you where you are.

When you choose a paid subscription, your contribution supports the Donald E. Waterfall Scholarship Fund, which mentors and uplifts emerging poets.

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What is Archipel?

Archipel is an ongoing dialogue between me and other poets and creatives of all kinds, celebrating the ways we connect through mentorship, community and transitions.

I am a poet and have lived over half of my life overseas. Most of my poems have been written in isolation, often adrift from the geographical, cultural and linguistic ties that might anchor me. But connection is essential to creative practice, whether you are doing it remotely or in person.

I have been sustained by my generous and brilliant mentors, and the poetry community at large. They have helped me brave rejection and combat doubt. They have cheered me on and taught me the importance of respecting other people who have chosen a similar calling.

Archipel was also inspired by my very first poetry mentor, my father. When you purchase a subscription to the newsletter, you are paying into a scholarship fund in his name, which will support emerging poets. 

Archipel (the French word for archipelago) embodies the idea of being separate yet interconnected. As a French-speaking Anglophone living in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire for the third time with a French partner and three children whose mother tongue is French, Archipel also explores my own experiences with the French language as well as the ways in which poetic language straddles the porous border between the real and the speculative.

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