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Poetry Festival Documentary: Ruth Stone’s Vast Library of the Female Mind
March 18, 2022 @ 12:00 am
On Sunday, March 27 at 4 pm, the Museum is pleased to screen , “Ruth Stone’s Vast Library of the Female Mind,” a new documentary about the revered poet. Running time is 76 mins, and filmmaker Nora Jacobson will be present. Tickets are $15 and can be purchased here.
Ruth Stone was a promising young poet, living an idyllic life with her beloved husband, a poet and professor. When he died unexpectedly by suicide, Ruth was flung out into the world, destitute with three daughters to support.
Though not well known outside of the poetry world, Ruth won many prestigious accolades and awards, such as the National Book Award for Poetry, the Wallace Stevens Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, two Guggenheim Fellowships, the Delmore Schwartz Award, and she was a finalist for the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, among many others.
Beloved by many, Ruth’s house in Goshen, Vermont became a mecca for students, poets, friends and family members. There, she inspired people to make art and write, not only through activities such as the “poetry game”, but by providing solace and nurture, surrounded by nature and camaraderie.
After Ruth died in 2011, her granddaughter Bianca Stone and husband Ben Pease, began renovating Ruth’s house and turning it into a writer’s retreat. Their goal is to create an enduring legacy that will keep Ruth’s name alive and nurture a new generation of poets.
Style of the Film: Using an intimate approach, the film, 12 years in the making, combines verité footage of Ruth at different times of her life, reciting poetry and talking about how she writes, intertwined with lively and heartfelt observations of people who knew her. These include award-winning poets Sharon Olds, Toi Derricotte, Major Jackson, Chard DeNiord, and Edward Hirsch, as well as those who knew her best—her daughters and grandchildren.
The film is enhanced with animation by granddaughter Bianca Stone, an accomplished poet and artist, and rare archival 16mm footage by Sidney Wolinsky of Ruth entertaining students and reciting poetry. Ruth’s home in Goshen, Vermont is also a star of the film. We see its transformation from a ramshackle and decrepit farmhouse to an inviting and vibrant poetry center.
Nora Jacobson is an award-winning filmmaker of documentaries and narrative films. Her 1992 film “Delivered Vacant” chronicles eight years of housing wars in Hoboken, NJ, in the throes of its conversion from mostly affordable blue-collar city to a sought-after bedroom community for white-collar New Yorkers. Her other films include The Hanji Box, the 6-part collaborative film Freedom & Unity: The Vermont Movie; My Mother’s Early Lovers and Nothing Like Dreaming. Her films have screened at many festivals including Sundance and the New York Film Festival, and shown on PBS. For more information, click here.
Pulitzer Prize winner Sharon Olds says, “Ruth Stone’s poems are mysterious, hilarious, powerful…They are understandable, but not simple…She has a tragic deadpan humor: love and destruction are right next to each other.”
Pulitzer Prize winner Galway Kinnell says, “Her poems startle us with their shapeliness, their humor, their youthfulness, their wild aptness, their strangeness, their sudden familiarity, the moral gulps they prompt, their fierce exactness of language and memory.”