Empire poet, playwright, and teacher Anne-Marie Oomen’s
memoir “Pulling Down the Barn” is being released
by Wayne State University Press. A frequent contributor of
poetry to the pages of the Glen Arbor Sun, Oomen has written
several plays based on local history, including “Aral:
A Folk Opera” (about a double murder near Otter Creek),
“Barta’s Path” (about Barta Peth, resident
of South Manitou), “Remembering Ruth,” and “A
Stone That Rises” (about the Burfiends, the first settlers
of Port Oneida). She has also published several chapbooks
of her poetry, including “Seasons of the Sleeping Bear,”
and Oomen’s skill as a reader is featured in the video
of the same name available at the Visitor’s Center of
the Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore in Empire. Anne-Marie
is one of the founding members of the Beach Bards Bonfire
held on Friday nights in summer at The Leelanau School beach
where she performs many of her own poems, and she is chair
of the Creative Writing Department at Interlochen Arts Academy.
Brandon Kelley at Wayne State University Press writes, “Pulling
Down the Barn eloquently recalls author Anne-Marie Oomen’s
personal journey as she discovers herself an outsider on her
family farm located in western Michigan’s Oceana County,
in the township of Elbridge — a couple hundred acres
in the middle of rural America. Written as a series of heartfelt
interlocking narratives, this collection of essays portrays
the realities of farm life: haying, picking asparagus and
cherries, the machinery of tractors and pickers; but each
chapter also touches upon the more ethereal and rarely articulated:
the stoic love that permeates a family, the farmer’s
struggle with identity, the unspoken patriarchy of land passed
onto sons (often at the expense of daughters), and the way
land can shape a childhood. With its rich language and style,
“Pulling Down the Barn” engrosses the reader in
Oomen’s memories — setting beauty and wonder against
work and loss — and paints a poignant portrait of growing
up in rural Michigan.”
Author Jerry Dennis of Traverse City writes, “The wind
sings through the pages of this wonderful memoir of coming
of age on an American farm. You can hear the waves on Lake
Michigan, feel snowflakes on your face, watch dust motes spiraling
in the hayloft. This book is about courage and endurance and
the grace to be found in simple moments.”
Pulitzer Prize winning poet Stephen Dunn exclaims, “’You
can’t take the farm out of the girl’ is a statement
that Anne-Marie Oomen would not only accede to, but has found
ways to celebrate in this well-written memoir. She, the writer,
has gone beyond her rural roots, but here she pays her loving
debts to the people and the natural world that so inform her
attractive sensibility.”
And author/teacher/editor Michael Steinberg writes, “Anne
Marie Oomen utilizes a poet’s eye to lovingly depict
the beauty of the northern Michigan landscape, while at the
same time finding a kind of dark splendor in its sometimes
harsh and raw climate. A must-read for those who love memoirs
about setting and place.”
Anne-Marie Oomen’s memoir “Pulling Down the Barn”
will soon be available on the shelves at the Cottage Book
Shop, or you can get it straight from the publisher by calling
1-800-WSU-READ, 1-800-(978-7323), or going to their web site,
http://wsupress.wayne.edu.