Cornelius Eady and Sarah Micklem have a busy address book. Thereโs their tiny apartment in New Yorkโs West Village; South Bend, Indiana, where Eady commutes to run Notre Dameโs creative writing program; and twin cottages on a hilltop near Cairo, New York. Side by side, compatible but self-contained, the cottages offer an apt metaphor for the marriage of two working writers.
Eadyโs seven books of poetry include Lamont Prize-winner Victims of the Latest Dance Craze, Brutal Imagination, and Pulitzer finalist The Gathering of My Name; heโs also an Obie Award-winning playwright. His latest book, Hardheaded Weather, opens with twin epigraphs from Ezra Pound (โMake it newโ) and James Brown (โMake it funkyโ). Eady does both, and he makes it his own.
Micklem is a fantasy novelist whose earthy, remarkable debut Firethorn earned glowing reviews and a Locus Award nomination. Wildfire, the second volume of her trilogy about a headstrong woman amid warring clans, will be published this month.
Today is the coupleโs 31st anniversary, and theyโre unwinding at their upstate getaway. โWhen we get up here, we immediately slow down,โ Eady says. โItโs the porch effect.โ After a realtor showed them the vacant cottages in 2001, they returned several times before making a bid. โWeโd bring coffee and sit on the porch,โ says Micklem. Eady adds, โWe were afraid the sheriff would show up and say, โWho are you?โโ Thereโs a subcutaneous tension in his laughter, recalling his poem โRecycling,โ in which โa middle-aged black and white coupleโ get the once-over at a Catskill dump: โAnyone with eyes can tell / Weโre a story that couldnโt have / Originated around these parts.โ
A big man with a world-warming smile, Eady sports waist-length dreads bundled into a ponytail, elegantly long nails, and horn-rimmed glasses. Heโs wearing a blue workshirt, dark trousers, and slippers. Micklem is dressed almost identicallyโa fact that amuses them both when they noticeโbut her sandy hair is a foot shorter than her husbandโs. Sheโs clear-eyed, quick, and light, self-effacing but quietly confident. In conversation, they listen respectfully, trading licks back and forth like a jazz duet.
They met in a โ70s-era free school in Rochester, Eadyโs hometown. Micklem was born in Virginia; her family moved several times before settling in upstate New York. A restless student who โhated high school,โ she savored the chance to mainline sci-fi novels in place of conventional classes. Eady transferred midyear and spent his time writing poems and songs, playing drums and guitar with a short-lived rock band. Micklem also wrote songs; Eady calls her the groupโs โhidden genius.โ
After high school, Micklem started writing a science fiction novel that opened, like Firethorn, with a young woman living alone in the woods. Having assayed a three-day vision quest in the Adirondacks at 16, she rented a cabin 10 miles from the nearest town, with no car. Eady would visit, bringing groceries and Stevie Wonder tapes. โHe was my lifeline,โ she says. โThat was probably when I fell in love with himโI just didnโt realize it at the time.โ (Eady was dating someone else, which โhelped put up the wall in my mind.โ)
The summer after her first year at Princeton, Micklemโs former bandmate came for a visit and, she says simply, โIt shifted.โย They married soon after. Eadyโs writing career was the first to take off, though heโs also supported himself with a series of teaching jobs. Micklem found full-time work as a graphic designer, but even when she wasnโt actively writing, Firethornโs world was marinating inside her head. โFor a long time, this was a hobby, a world-building hobby,โ she says. โIโd think of weird things on long drivesโwhat are their books like? I want them to have writing, but not like ours. What do their maps look like?โ
At a writersโ conference, Eady met workshop leader Abigail Thomas and knew heโd found the right midwife for his wifeโs book. โThe big reason I finished was Abby,โ Micklem concurs. โI learned to go in, go deeper, look around.โ
Though sheโs always her husbandโs first reader, Micklem doesnโt always share her work in progress. โI donโt read everything Sarahโs doing, but I hear about it all the time,โ Eady says, and she laughs. โMostly whining,โ she says. She admires his equanimity. โCornelius doesnโt agonize over process, he doesnโt complain when heโs not writing, itโs all fine. He doesnโt seem to envy other people.โ But, Micklem says, โHeโs a binge writer. He goes at it and stays at it, he forgets to eat.โ
Eady sees many parallels between writing and music, and often references jazz, blues, and dance in his poems. โPoetry is a mysterious, slightly threatening thing for many people. Like opera, they think of it as a foreign language, something thatโs only for a few people who have the training to understand it.โ His unfussy voice goes a long way to defuse such worries. โI made a conscious choice to write clearly, to be intelligent but also accessible,โ he says.
Strikingly varied in format, Eadyโs poems often invoke personal experience, from befuddled home ownership (โLucky Houseโ) to mourning a difficult father (โYou Donโt Miss Your Waterโ). โItโs autobiography, but itโs also fiction. What happened is a jumping-off point,โ he says. โI use my parents and neighbors a lot as source materialโtheyโre stories you donโt often hear about African-Americans. My language comes from them.โ
Eady was named after his father and grandfather. โCornelius is a name you grow into. When I was a kid, I hated it,โ he says, imitating a schoolteacher calling roll: โBob, Jim, Cornelius. Now I love it. It sounds like a poetโs name.โ
Thirteen years ago, Eady and Toi Derricotte founded Cave Canem, an annual retreat for African-American poets. The weeklong workshops foment a sense of community and an exploration of โAfrican-American voiceโ that embraces everything from hip-hop to MFA programs. Eady says, โPeople can get in each otherโs hairโโYouโre not political enough!โ Theyโre eating each otherโs young. At Cave Canem, itโs a seven-day truce.โ
The workshopโs logo, an unchained black dog, appears on a license plate over the door of the cottage where Eady writes and they share living space. Micklem works in the smaller cottage, surrounded by โ40s board games, vintage prints, and research books. Though her trilogy takes place in an imagined world, it has taproots in numerous cultures. Micklemโs website describes Firethornโs society: โItโs a patriarchy in which the role of the warrior is exalted, and it has a rigid caste system maintained by violence and the threat of violence. Firethorn is a woman among soldiers, a camp follower. Sheโs at the bottom of the heap, being female and low caste.โ
Micklem sees caste as a metaphor for race (โItโs another way to write about how we divide ourselvesโ), basing her mud/blood distinctions on Jim Crow laws. Wildfire invents an even more stratified culture, with an untouchable caste whose members must cover their faces in public. โIt was actually very hard for me, from my privileged background as a modern American, to write the correct amount of deference,โ she says. Firethorn frequently chafes in her role as โsheathโ (wartime lover) to highborn Sire Galan, whose behavior toward her is likewise complex. โI think being inconsistent is important,โ says Micklem. โHeโs not a great romantic hero. Heโs very self-centered. I tried to make him accurate to what a man raised in that period, as a warrior, would be.โ
What period? Micklem smiles. โThereโs a lot of Middle Ages, but itโs so not Christian.โ
Indeed. Sheโs created a fascinatingly intricate cosmology of 12 gods, each with three avatars (male, female, and elemental) arrayed in a circular compass. Firethorn consults the gods by throwing a pair of fingerbones, I-Ching style, and interpreting where they land. Micklem fashioned a model divining compass on a circle of suede, buying two human fingerbones online and coloring them in the manner of Firethornโs two mentors. Whenever her heroine cast the bones in the story, the author cast too. She was struck by the patterns. โI expected more random results, but certain signs really would recur. I can see how divination is powerful. I really donโt believe in GodโIโm an atheistโbut I do believe in belief.โ
Though Micklem describes her purview as โno dragons, no elves,โ Firethorn does leave her body in a memorable battle scene. โI wanted to write a pretty realistic book, except for magic. What is true in our real world is so bizarre, and so totally underestimated by those of us who grew up in science-based cultures,โ she says. โPeople can fly, in shamanic traditions. What is a tranceโis it really happening? Does a curse really work? Itโs a matter of how you see cause and effect. Magic is a way of giving agency to ourselves.โ
Along with magic and shamanism, Micklem has researched anthropology, childbirth, warfare in all eras, tournaments, armor and weaponry, textiles, prostitution, herbalism, hallucinogens, aphasia, brain damage, and lightning. โIโm afraid of writing historical novels because you have to get everything right,โ she says, deadpanning, โIโm not writing about what I know.โ
Eady says one of his joys in reading Micklemโs manuscripts is discovering why sheโs been reading the books that pile up in their various homes. Micklem radiates pride as she recalls hearing him read โGratitudeโ for the first time; their writersโ retreat for two seems just as supportive as Cave Canem. As they stand in the driveway between their two cottages, discussing which restaurant to choose for an anniversary dinner en route to New York, itโs tempting to conjure the last lines of Eadyโs poem โThe White Couchโ: โAll this moving, he says. / Ah! He says. / This is living. / This is life.โ
This article appears in July 2009.











