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Inspiration Isn’t So Straightforward

Jim Frazee Author Interview

Thief of Laughter is an intimate and evocative collection of poetry that lays bare the fragility of identity, memory, and family while embodying faith in humanity that struggles to make sense of everyday carnage, yet manages to find solace in spite of it. What inspired you to write this particular collection of poems?

I wish I could answer this question the way Rachmanioff did about what inspired him to write one of his piano concertos: “I wanted to buy a car.” But for me, inspiration isn’t so straightforward (or humorous), partly because I don’t really need inspiration to write. I need time, early mornings, when everyone is asleep, when there are no interruptions. These poems were written over 50 years. Many are short narratives – some autobiographical, some not, and some a blending of the two. Sometimes I can’t avoid writing about something seen or experienced. It can be a single word, a casual remark, or an event that hounds me until I have to sit down and work on it and find out why. 

How did you decide on the themes that run throughout your poetry book?

No decision was ever made. The various themes of the book arrived on their own, and told me where to go with them. 

Were there any poets or other writers who influenced your work on this collection?

Dozens of them. I was very fortunate to have great teachers and colleagues along the way. A lot of generosity, kindness, humor and smarts. I think all of these people come through in these poems. If there were one book though that guided me through all these years, it was Nabokov’s SPEAK MEMORY.

How has this poetry book changed you as a writer, or what did you learn about yourself through writing it?

I learned why it’s necessary to be a good person. That you don’t really have a choice, because living the alternative is a form of self-destruction. By writing, you begin to see things more clearly – it documents perception, understanding, and temperament. Over years, you not only see who you were, but how you got to where you are now.

Author Links: GoodReads | Website

Thief of Laughter, Jim Frazee’s debut collection of poems, draws from the quiet violence of his youth in Southern California, to Spain during the final reign of Franco, and back again. His narratives embody a faith in humanity guided by a moral compass that struggles to make sense of everyday carnage, yet manages to find solace in spite of it. Praised by poet Louise Glück as “one of the most remarkable people I’ve ever met,” Frazee unmasks the disappearance of childhood under the thumb of an unforgiving father and the chokehold of religion. His work explores themes of guilt, loss, emotion, and the brutality that often shapes our adult lives, teaching us how to endure.

Thief of Laughter

Jim Frazee’s Thief of Laughter is an intimate and evocative collection of poetry that scrapes raw nerves and lays bare the fragility of identity, memory, and family. The book weaves through a lifetime of emotional collisions. Fathers and sons, adolescent cruelty, war and its ghosts, spiritual betrayals, and fleeting moments of tenderness. Frazee captures these with a poet’s sharp eye and a survivor’s haunted voice, his language pulling no punches and never hiding behind pretense.

Frazee’s style is straightforward, sure-footed, but packed with layers. What struck me hardest was how many of the poems felt like emotional snapshots. The kind you can’t put back in the album once you’ve touched them. The violence of silence in “My Father’s Lesson,” the unspeakable grief tucked into “Elegy for E,” or the nearly unbearable self-loathing and regret that pulses through “Jell-O,” these pieces didn’t ask for sympathy. They earned it.

And yet, Frazee doesn’t let the darkness smother you. There’s a strange grace to his honesty. The title poem, “Thief of Laughter,” might be one of the most potent explorations of intergenerational pain I’ve read in a long time. It’s unflinching. Still, there’s beauty in the precision of his images and a kind of quiet rebellion in his insistence on remembering. Even when he writes about cruelty towards himself, others, or from the world at large, there’s a current of compassion, sometimes bitter, sometimes soft, running beneath it all.

If you’ve ever grappled with your past, questioned the people who raised you, or wondered what ghosts still rattle around in your own head, this book might sting, but it’ll also speak to you. I’d recommend Thief of Laughter to anyone who’s lived long enough to lose something important.

Pages: 156 | ASIN : B0F3KNLJ3P

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