Noah Falck
Noah Falck | |
|---|---|
| Born | April 23, 1977 Dayton, Ohio, U.S. |
| Occupation | Teacher, education director |
| Alma mater | BS, University of Dayton, MS, University of Dayton |
| Genre | Poetry |
| Notable awards | Judson Jerome Poetry Prize 2003 Open Thread Chapbook Award 2009 Paul Laurence Dunbar Poetry Prize 2010 James Tate Poetry Prize 2022 |
| Spouse | Sherri Falck |
Noah Falck (born April 23, 1977) is an American poet, teacher, arts nonprofit executive, and culture worker.
Life and work
Poetry and Editing
Falck is the author of the poetry collections Exclusions (Tupelo Press, 2020), a finalist for the 2020 Believer Book Award, and Snowmen Losing Weight (BatCat Press, 2012)[1][2][3] as well as several chapbooks including the co-written collection, Prerecorded Weather (SurVision Books, 2022), winner of the James Tate Poetry Prize.[4] His work has appeared in Boston Review, Kenyon Review,[5] Harvard Review,[6] Conduit,[7] Ploughshares,[8] The Slowdown, and Poets.org.[9]
Falck has described his evolution as a poet as proceeding from an interest in narrative and world toward an interest in compression, voice, and "astonishment."[10] Literary critics and scholars have associated Falck's more recent work with a "poetics of bewilderment" first articulated by the poet Fanny Howe in 1999, a practice "that often emulates the subconscious" by "relinquishing control."[11] "Really with all of the Exclusion poems it was about setting a certain mood against the subjects and surrounding them with obscurity," Falck noted in a commentary on his poem "Poem Excluding Romance" in Winter Tangerine.[12]
His credits as editor include My Next Heart: New Buffalo Poetry (BlazeVOX Books, 2017) and Silo City Reading Series: Ten Years of Poems in Grain Silos (Just Buffalo, 2022).[13][14]
Just Buffalo Literary Center
Born and raised in Dayton, Ohio, Falck worked as a teacher before moving to Buffalo, New York to serve as Education Director at Just Buffalo Literary Center,[15] the premier center for the literary arts in the Buffalo/Niagara region.[16] After a decade at the organization, he took on the newly created role of Literary Director, "a unique position with a wide spectrum of responsibilities ... part education, part programming, part community engagement, part curation."[17]
Silo City Reading Series
In 2013, Falck founded the Silo City Reading Series, a multimedia poetry event series inside a 120-foot high, 100-year-old abandoned grain elevator in Buffalo. The first event featured the poet Joe Hall, the klezmer band Ahavaraba, and the photographer Thomas Bittner.[18] Falck recalled the first Silo reading:
It was a little art party, which is to me what a reading should be—it should be a party. I'm always interested in inviting new people into the scene and inviting them to experience a poem, and a lot of readings don't feel like that. They feel stiff, like some people aren't smart enough to engage with poetry, or won't get it. I think having the music and art elements are a way of inviting different communities in, saying, this is all poetry as well. That was some of the idea behind the silos. And the space is a poem too.[19]
The series continues today under the auspices of Just Buffalo. Readers and performers have included Ocean Vuong, Jericho Brown, Hanif Abdurraqib, Roger Reeves, Solmaz Sharif, Megan Fernandes, Morgan Parker, Maggie Smith, Julie Byrne, Sun June, Wild Pink, Edreys Wajed, Ariel Aberg-Riger, Chuck Tingley, and many others.[20] The series has earned national praise for Falck's curation and for the inspired setting in Silo City. Poet Phil Metres described the complex as “the gentle ghost-grain future rising out of the rude concrete brutalism of the past.”[21] Falck told Fear No Lit:
Originally, I think we just wanted to read poems in a cool place, along the river around these beautiful, decaying structures. But as the series developed we knew there was an opportunity to highlight not only the industrial past of Buffalo, but also a chance to showcase the Buffalo arts community in an unusual space.There is a 7-second natural reverb inside the Marine A grain silo. The sound of a poet’s voice echoing throughout plays a major role in the tone of the event. As a reader you really have to slow down and focus on your words, your delivery. And the same goes for anyone attending an event. If you don't pay attention, you might miss something.The silos capture both the history of the city and the architectural innovation. So, to invite the most exciting poets and artists into these spaces to feature their work seems like a gift. It has also been a way for us to share the experience of Buffalo with these visiting poets – so when they go back home, whether it be New York or LA or Boston they will hopefully think back on Buffalo with a sense of awe.[22]
Buffalo Correspondance School
Buffalo Correspondance School officially began in summer 2024 as a" collaborative mail art project between Ariel Aberg-Riger and Noah Falck. BCS is not a circle, a rhombus, a drawing, a poem, or a door. It is a river becoming a lake."[23] Falck and Aberg-Riger described the project as a natural outgrowth of the Silo City Summer Reading Series, where Falck had selected Aber-Riger as a featured artist. "Three days after the silos I had to abruptly move across the country to California, and it felt like we were mid-sentence, creatively. We had so enjoyed making things together, and I wanted to just keep making things with him. I knew we both loved Ray Johnson and mail art so I sent him a small pile of drawings and found photos and wrote 'Welcome to the Buffalo Correspondance School. Please add to and respond.' And he did. And then I did. And we just kept going," Aberg-Riger told Buffalo Hive.[24]
In October 2025, Buffalo Correspondance School mounted its first public event, Fatigue Performance, at the Burchfield-Penney Art Center in Buffalo. With help from a New York State Council on the Arts grant for a poetry collection in progress titled Fatigue Performance, Falck enlisted Aberg-Riger, musician Kevin Cain, and the band Plant Water to put the poems to music, turning it into "an immersive experiential event blending poetry, music, and art."[25] The public event marked the release of a lathe-cut vinyl record featuring poems by Falck, music by plant water, and design by Aberg-Riger.[26]
Bibliography
- Prerecorded Weather (with Matt McBride; SurVision Books, 2022)
- Exclusions (Tupelo Press, 2020)
- My Next Heart: New Buffalo Poetry, ed. (BlazeVOX Books, 2017)
- You Are In Nearly Every Future (Dostoyevsky Wannabe x, 2017)
- Celebrity Dream Poems (Poor Claudia, 2013)
- Snowmen Losing Weight (BatCat Press, 2012) ISBN 978-0-9843678-6-3
- Life As A Crossword Puzzle (Open Thread, 2009)
- Measuring Tape For The Midwest (Pavement Saw, 2008)
- Homemade Engines From A Dream (Pudding House Publications, 2007)
References
- ^ BatCat Press, Snowmen Losing Weight by Noah Falck, July 7, 2013
- ^ "The results of the 2017 July Open Reading Period". Tupelo Press. 2017-09-13. Retrieved 2019-12-05.
- ^ "Exclusions". Noah Falck. Retrieved 2019-12-05.
- ^ "ABOUT". Noah Falck. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ Kenyon Review, 22. Across; 30. Across, July 7, 2013
- ^ "Noah Falck – Harvard Review". Retrieved 2019-12-05.
- ^ "Poems". Noah Falck. Retrieved 2019-12-05.
- ^ Ploughshares, Poem Excluding Children, February 26, 2018
- ^ Poets.org, February 26, 2018
- ^ Kelly (2018-04-16). "I'm Still Trying to Figure It Out: An Interview with Noah Falck". Rain Taxi. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "On 'Bewilderment': both a poetics and an ethics". 2023-02-08. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "Poem Excluding Romance". Winter Tangerine. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "An anthology of Buffalo poets". www.buffalospree.com. 10 April 2018. Retrieved 2019-12-05.
- ^ "Ten Years of Poems in Grain Silos". Noah Falck. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ Just Buffalo Literary Center
- ^ Kelly (2018-04-16). "I'm Still Trying to Figure It Out: An Interview with Noah Falck". Rain Taxi. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "Focus on Fellowships: Noah Falck of Just Buffalo — LitNYS | Literary Arts Coaltion". LIT NYS. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ Kelly (2018-04-16). "I'm Still Trying to Figure It Out: An Interview with Noah Falck". Rain Taxi. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ Kelly (2018-04-16). "I'm Still Trying to Figure It Out: An Interview with Noah Falck". Rain Taxi. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "Silo City Reading Series". Just Buffalo Literary Center | Buffalo, NY. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ Freehill-Maye, Lynn (2016-07-31). "The Trouble with Owning a Grain Elevator". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "Learning How to Reading: Silo City Reading Series". FEAR NO LIT. 2018-08-08. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "Instagram". www.instagram.com. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ Pohl, R. D. (2025-10-23). "The Buffalo Hive interview with 'Fatigue Performance' collaborators -". Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ queenseyes (2025-10-21). "Buffalo Correspondance School + Burchfield Penney Art Center present: "Fatigue Performance"". Buffalo Rising. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "Buffalo Correspondance School + Burchfield Penney Art Center present: FATIGUE PERFORMANCE - Burchfield Penney Art Center". burchfieldpenney.org. Retrieved 2026-02-26.