LIFE'S FUNNY
Type Cast
How Greensboro’s Nich Graham rocks his Royal Safari
By Maria Johnson
Tangerine, soul, gossip, smoke.
It’s an odd foursome of words, but Nich Graham has invited me to bring prompts to our coffee-shop interview to spark the free verse that he pounds out on his old-school mechanical keyboard.
It’s his schtick and his bliss. Back for the second year in a row, Nich will bring his Typewriter Poetry, a form of performance art, to the Greensboro Bound book festival this month.
Clack-clack, clack-clack.
He’s a forefinger typist, even though his 1960s manual typewriter — Royal brand, beige Safari model, complete with Williamsburg-blue, hard-shell case — harks to an era when legions of students, mostly women, learned touch-typing to prepare them for futures as secretaries.
At 31, Nich knows nothing about quick brown foxes jumping over lazy dogs. Sporting a smattering of tattoos and a cotton tee repping Osees, a psych-rock band formed in San Francisco, he’s a lank and bright-eyed creature of his time. He recalls a brush with keyboarding instruction in fifth grade.
“We didn’t do it, so the teacher gave up,” he says.
He jabs the chunky keys with his index fingers.
Clack-clack, clack-clack.
He hammers out the four words, which appear at the top of a notecard curled around the typewriter’s heavy roller. He closes his eyes to find the flow. His verse shows up in jagged lines.
Her soul glowed
a citrus petrichor that
billowed out
in smoke
A perfume scented in
the same color
* tangerine
*
Just for the record, I’m not wearing perfume; neither one of us is smoking; the asterisks are a part of the poem; and petrichor means the earthy smell that arises when rain hits the ground.
I mean, he never said he was writing about me, but still.
I discreetly sniff my pits while taking notes.
Wait. Is citrus petrichor a candle scent? Do I smell like a candle?
Clack-clack, clack-clack
He uses the word “trouble” to describe himself as a young man growing up in Newark, California, on the lower lip of San Francisco Bay.
His mom, a single parent whom Nich describes as loving and tough, laid down the law when he dropped out of high school.
“You gotta figure something else out, kid, because this isn’t working,” she said.
With her blessing, Nich, who pronounces his name “Nick,” moved to the High Sierra mountains where he lived with his maternal grandmother, a “mestiza” of mixed Native American and Spanish heritage.
Together, they tended her flowers, vegetables, trees and cacti. Pulling a red wagon loaded with his grandmother’s gardening supplies, Nich absorbed lessons about time, patience and setting the right conditions for growth. He also discovered that he learned best when he was outdoors and when he worked with his hands.
A seed rooted in his teenage brain. He still hung with trouble, but, after a near-death experience, the seed sprouted.
He enrolled in a community college, where he excelled at horticulture and art. An associate’s degree later, he headed to Humboldt State College. Outside of class, he worked odd jobs and busked spoken-word poetry for donations.
A descendant of storytellers on his mother’s Southwestern side and his father’s Iranian side, Nich was a veteran of open mic competitions and poetry slams.
Spitting words came easily. The sidewalk crowds did not.
“I couldn’t compete by yelling poetry,” he says.
A friend suggested that Nich get an old typewriter as a prop and start channeling his verse via keys.
He did and added a sign: “Free-Range, Organic, Non-GMO Poetry.”
Onlookers, many of whom were too young to remember the days before computer keyboards, stepped closer, curious about the chattering machine.
If they wanted to try it, Nich let them take the beast for a spin so they could feel the bouncing action of keys under their fingertips, see the thin metal arms embossed with backwards letters striking the ribbon before dropping back into line, and hear magical rat-a-tat-tat of letters turning into words turning into thoughts.
The general reaction?
“Stoked,” Nich says. “Just stoked.”
Clack-clack, clack-clack.
Nich’s poem takes shape. Citrus petrichor wafts into another idea.
Where chisma was brought around
professional gossip
too
obtuse a term
I have to look it up. “Chisma” means rumor in Spanish.
Is “professional gossip” an obtuse term? I think not. But let me tell you who in this business is obtuse. Later.
Did Nich and I dish on work? Not really, unless you count a conversation about how writers absorb, digest and express their experiences differently.
Hmm. Maybe I don’t smell like a candle.
Clack-clack, clack-clack
Nich came to Greensboro in early 2019, intending to do a residency at Elsewhere, Greensboro’s museum of offbeat collections.
Then came a virus. And cancellations.
With no money and no way to get home, Nich repaired to the mountains of Southwest Virginia to help a woman start a goat farm. Word of mouth brought more agri-gigs, eventually leading to Greensboro’s private Canterbury School, where he still works as a garden educator, tilling, planting, weeding, watering, mulching, harvesting and composting with K-8 students.
Recently, he guided two eighth-grade girls in fixing a broken tiller.
“We sat down without YouTube and figured out how to get that thing running again,” says Nich. “It was literally the proudest moment of my teaching career. Anytime I see them I’m like, ‘Yeah!’ ”
The younger students call him Mr. Diggy.
“I’m like, ‘Whatever you want to call me is OK, little humans,’” he says. “I like seeing them grow and develop, too.”
Now working toward a master’s degree in experiential and outdoor education at Western Carolina University, Nich also does permaculture projects for private clients. In June and July, he will be working for the Creative Aging Network of Greensboro, leading gardening sessions for grandparents and their grandchildren, as well as caregivers and their charges.
He’s stuck on growth.
Swiss chard.
Lettuce.
Watermelon.
Understanding.
Connections.
He hopes to move his mother and grandmother here from California.
“I said, ‘Just come out here. I’ll take care of you,’” he says.
He sees a home, a few acres, a family-run orchard, maybe a cider press.
Clack-clack, clack-clack.
A dozen times a year, he gets paid for doing Typewriter Poetry at literary events, parties and fundraisers. On May 17, the day of the book festival, he will pop up his word shop from 1–5 p.m in the Greensboro Cultural Center.
People will feed him a few words at a time. He will type them at the top of a note card printed with his artwork, close his eyes, sway like a musician until he catches a melody of meaning, then start typing.
He can tell a lot about people, he says, by the words they toss him.
About a half give him greeting-card words: love, hope, promise — what they think they should say.
Another quarter supply words borne of turmoil. One woman started crying when she read Nich’s interpretation. “I get the privilege of helping them process whatever they’re going through,” he says.
Another quarter hand him playthings.
Nich slaps the carriage return, a chrome lever, with confidence. His poem is coming in for a soft landing.
aspiring to
share stories that
captured more than
essence
seeping down
in a river formation
a journey around
ink
&
noise
&
heart
