4 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Shelley Rose Sierra Golden at Gas Works Park in Seattle, Wash. InTo tHe dEpThS Fisherpoet Sierra Golden publishes her fi rst poetry collection, ‘The Slow Art’ By RYAN HUME FOR COAST WEEKEND L Jeff Golden From left: Tyler Jones, Sierra Golden and Josh Corliss aboard the F/V Challenger with a deckload of pink samon in Southeast Alaska in 2013. ike a trawler’s crew in search of rock- fi sh, Seattle-area poet Sierra Golden’s fi rst col- lection mines the depths. Plunging the reader into the physical world of mar- itime labor and the bliss and hardships of a life at sea (among other homes), Golden pulls up unique emotional revelations from these experiences. The seasoned FisherPoet, winner of the 2018 Dorothy Brunsman Poetry Prize, will support her new book, “The Slow Art,” at the 2019 Fish- erPoets Gathering, taking place Friday through Sun- day, Feb. 22 through 24. Coast Weekend spoke with Golden by email in anticipation of her upcom- ing appearances. This inter- view has been edited and condensed for length. Coast Weekend: First, could you explain what the title of your book, “The Slow Art,” means to you? Sierra Golden: Those words fi rst came to me while I was writ- ing the poem “Under the Madrone.” In that poem, I explore the idea of boat building as a metaphor for relationships and for love. I specifi cally say, “the slow art of bending ribs.” I see a shipwright attentively cut- ting, steaming and bending a plank that will be shaped into a wooden boat’s rib. I imagine it’s a process where you can go too far, and then one is left with a broken thing. I think relationships are the same way — we have to learn “the slow art” of lov- ing someone. We must be patient and attentive and also strong and creative and demanding, and then the relationship might become a thing as beautiful and useful as a boat. CW: You’ve published poems in literary journals all over the country ... Is this your fi rst collection? SG: Yes. I’ve also pub- lished a chapbook called “Aristotle’s Lantern,” but it’s basically a shorter, less polished version of “The Slow Art.” In the music world, “Aristotle’s Lantern” would be my EP and “The Slow Art” would be my fi rst album. CW: From the con- text of your work, it seems like you have been steeped