Emma Trelles, Santa Barbara’s Poet Laureate

Miami Native and Daughter of Cuban Immigrants Celebrates Life’s Wild and Concrete Forms

Emma Trelles, Santa Barbara’s Poet Laureate

Miami Native and Daughter of Cuban Immigrants Celebrates Life’s Wild and Concrete Forms

By Charles Donelan | June 3, 2021

SHAPING CHAOS:  Trelles views her work as an attempt to give a recognizable shape to the chaos of life. | Credit: Erick Madrid

The position of poet laureate of Santa Barbara, initiated in 2005 and first held by the late Barry Spacks, offers an opportunity and a challenge. Granted, this city is an unlimited source of inspiration, but how do you improve on paradise? What can a poet give to the city that has everything?

When Emma Trelles became the ninth person to hold the laureateship this spring, the city found an answer. The daughter of Cuban immigrants and a native of Miami, Trelles has been a journalist in South Florida and a professor at Santa Barbara City College. Her book Tropicalia, which received the Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize in 2010, overflows with the emotional intelligence and rhetorical clout of a lifelong poet. 

In describing how her writing reflects her background, Trelles uses the Cuban Spanish metaphorical verb resolver, which means “to make things work despite obstacles.” In a recent email, she said that her poems “document the bright green fly at the center of a succulent or the experience of walking home at dusk with a bag of street tacos.” Writing about the world she sees and her responses to it gives her a “way of understanding it or at least giving its chaos a recognizable shape.” 

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