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STAFF Q & A/Think poetry
and technology don't go together? Come meet Teresa Leo.
Technical writing
was an incredibly
positive force because the idea of precision and getting the right word
really helped me become better as a poet.
BY TRINH TRAN
At Kelly
Writers House Teresa Leo found a home.
TERESA
LEO
Position:
Acting
Director, Kelly Writers House; Senior Electronic Publications
Specialist, Information Systems and Computing
Length
of service:
A
few months at the Writers House; 10 years at ISC
Other
stuff:
The
38-year-old writer/techie enjoys all things athletic, especially
basketball.
Photo
by Candace diCarlo
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Teresa Leo has enough material for 10 impressive resumes. There is no
street on the Philadelphia literary map that she hasnt covered,
from columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer to editor of the Painted
Bride Quarterly. And now, after 10 years as a technical writer for
Penns Information Systems and Computing, shes lending her
creative energy to Penns literary arts hub, the Kelly Writers House,
helping put together a jam-packed schedule of 150 programs per semester.
Leo, who stepped in this year as acting director while Director Kerry
Sherin is on leave, is no newcomer to the Writers House. Shes been
volunteering on the Writers House Planning Committee since its founding
in 1995.
We caught her during one of those rare pauses at the Writers House and
asked her about what drives and inspires her.
Q. How did your interest in writing come about?
A. I started writing at an early age, even before high school. I can
remember [being] 7 years old, scratching things down in a notebook and
always loving English in school. I come from an immigrant Italian family,
and there were a lot of storytellers in the house. My grandmothers had
some great stories of their lives, things that they did and coming over
to this country.
Q. What are some of the recent writings youve done?
A. The most recent thing I was working on was some essays about a
trip I took to Vietnam in February of 2000. It was an amazing experience
there. The trip I took was backpacking from Saigon [Ho Chi Minh City]
to Hanoi, pretty much taking every means of transportation available.
So the creative non-fiction stories were [about] people I met along the
way, their stories and what the country was like 25 years after the war.
I was also doing some freelance writing for the Philadelphia Inquirer.
The background is that I had a column for a year between 1999 and 2000,
and when I was going they asked if Id like to write a commentary
on globalization in Vietnam so thats what I did too. But that wasnt
how the trip started, that was sort of an aside.
Q. Do all of your writings start from the personal?
A. It always starts from the personal. [But] like any other writer,
you try to broaden it so that other people can feel something from it
or can relate to it in some way. Otherwise, it seems it can become [too]
personal.
Q. How do you deal with the fear of overexposing yourself?
A. I also write poetry, and I think poetry is where I bury other kinds
of truth. In poetry, I can be more cryptic. I can use the form of poetry
to really tackle some subjects that I might not be willing to express
in a more open form, like the essay. In the essay, I feel like youre
not leaving many stones unturned. Whereas in poetry, you can maybe hint
at it and then move away from it.
Q. How did you go from ISC to the Writers House?
A. I came to Philadelphia to go to Temple University to get the MA
in creative writing and my concentration was poetry. I didnt want
to teach so I really wasnt sure what I wanted to do. It turned out
that there was a job at Penn in Information Systems and Computing for
a staff writer [with a] technical focus.
I really didnt know much about computers at all. I did all of my
masters work on a typewriter and this was 1990 so I was a little
behind the eight ball.
But they were actually at that time looking for someone who could write
end user documentation for people who might just be like me, the novice.
So if I could come in and learn it and write about it then maybe I could
be able to instruct other people to do it. So I was the perfect test case
in a sense. I enjoyed it. I ended up staying for 10 years.
Its a different kind of writing, but if you really love writing
youre adaptable. Ive done journalism, creative writing and
technical writing. Each one lends to the other. Technical writing was
an incredibly positive force for my poetry because the idea of precision
and getting the right wordno excess, you get right down to the core
of itin conjunction with the love of language and literature really
help me become better as a poet.
Q. Is it going to be hard to shift gears and go back to ISC?
A. The good news is that Im still on the [Writers House] Planning
Committee so I can always be involved in some way. It will be a little
like shifting gears [but] I didnt just go from IT to this. I was
editor of the Painted Bride Quarterly.
Even when I was doing the technical writing, I was doing this: I was
a contributing editor for CrossConnect, which is affiliated with
the Writers House, and I still am. And I am contributing editor for the
American Poetry Review. So those things were always happening.
But I love it because it all really fuels you. Its all so inspiring,
and I dont think I would have it any other way.
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