Kathleen M. Heideman
(906) 330-0041
ore...@orebody.com
Poetry in Undermined Places
What do you call it when the ground collapses under a small town? In her new book of poetry, The Caving Grounds, Michigan author and environmentalist Kathleen Heideman explores the subterranean world of historic iron mines and mine subsidence.
“The Caving Grounds excavates the rubble of Negaunee, a small town in Upper Michigan hollowed by a century of mining. The extraction of hematite caused underground collapses and sinkholes; undermined neighborhoods were deemed unstable; homes, churches and even cemeteries were moved, and dangerous areas fenced. Thankfully, a guide will emerge: Rusty.”
Heideman began her research nearly 30 years ago. “I started interviewing some of the older residents of Negaunee. I was deeply moved by the stories they shared, by the large and small tragedies that haunt families and landscapes.”
The history of mining in Michigan could fill rooms, but the undermining of Negaunee was poorly documented – and never transformed into poetry. “Everyone I met shared a fragment of the larger narrative – memories of children who drowned in mine pits, injured husbands, men who worked in rat-infested tunnels, uncles lost to mine cave-ins, homes torn down or moved because of the caving grounds,” said Heideman. “I knew a woman who’d sneak under the Caving Grounds fence every year, to pick apples from trees planted by her father. Every inch of Negaunee has been blasted and removed, overturned, or moved to make way for more mining. What remains is resilient, pure poetry.”
The Caving Grounds has now been published by Modern History Press, as part of the Yooper Poetry Series.
Since iron was discovered in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula in 1844, Negaunee produced countless millions of tons of hematite iron ore. But the small town was undermined by the same mines that put it on the map. As underground mining expanded, many areas were condemned; 900 acres were considered “unsafe due to underground mining activities,” according to the City’s 2017 Master Plan, and residents “had to take all belongings including their homes. For decades the land was fenced off and considered unusable.” In 2003, Negaunee purchased the abandoned land from the mining company. Sections have reopened, with bike paths threading between deep mine pits, rusting fences, the cracked streets of lost neighborhoods and ominous signs that still read “Danger: Caving Grounds. Keep Out.”
“Heideman is a passionate, persistent and well-informed advocate for the natural world and human flourishing,” said filmmaker Mark Doremus, editor of The 906 Report. “The Caving Grounds is much more than an exemplary collection of poems: it’s a thoroughly researched, and visceral, account of the human and physical devastation imposed by 181 (and counting) years of intensive resource extraction in the Upper Peninsula.”
Heideman’s book launch reading of The Caving Grounds will take place on Tuesday April 1 at 6:30 p.m. at the Peter White Public Library in Marquette, MI, followed by a book signing. The reading kicks off the Library’s Great Lakes Poetry Festival. This event is free and open to the public.
Kathleen M. Heideman is the author of The Caving Grounds, A Brief Report on the Human Animal and Psalms of the Early Anthropocene. A poet, artist and environmentalist working in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, she has completed residencies with the National Park Service, watersheds, research stations, private foundations, and the National Science Foundation’s Antarctic Artists & Writers Program. Drawn to wild and threatened places, she works to defend them as a board member of the Upper Peninsula Environmental Coalition. Curious woman.
Modern History Press
ModernHistoryPress.com
5145 Pontiac Trail
Ann Arbor, MI 48105-9627
in...@ModernHistoryPress.com
(888) 761-6268
Media Kit for The Caving Grounds
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