Indie Groundbreaking Book
The Heart’s Necessities: Life in Poetry
Unique Collaboration between Two Generations

Thus began a decade-long artistic collaboration during which Becca wrote five more songs featuring Jane’s work, and eventually pitched the book idea. Now Plough has released the second ever collection of Jane’s poetry called The Heart’s Necessities: Life in Poetry. Several of the poems are annotated by Becca’s interpretations, "a reminder that great work can still be relevant many generations after it was written.”
Clement, who was a contemporary of Emily Dickinson and Gerard Manley Hopkins, wrote poignantly about love, longing, heartbreak, and nature. In this new book, skillfully edited by Veery Huleatt, a portrait of the poet emerges as a strong yet vulnerable, politically active young woman.
The concept would be quite unique: to present the life and poetry of a little-known poet alongside an introduction and commentary from an up-and-coming singer-songwriter. Huleatt felt that a poet’s biography, mixed with thoughts from a contemporary voice, would resonate with younger people – especially women – who ask the same questions Clement asked in her poems: Who am I? What is love? What is faith? How do I deal with loss and death? What are my creative efforts worth?
“I spent a long time looking for comparable titles, and there really isn’t a lot out there. It really felt like we were building it from scratch, which was exciting but also difficult,” recalls Huleatt. “As Becca notes in the book, Jane’s poetry has this universal, generous quality that always meets you where you’re at, and accompanies you through different seasons of the soul. We’re living in a time that demands a constant flow of content and there’s so much that is always yanking at our attention.”
"In this environment, I think there’s something centering and refreshing about unplugging and sitting down with a physical book full of poetry that demands your time and attention …and then more than repays your time and attention with wisdom and beauty and truth.”
“Jane Tyson Clement’s poetry is intimate – she writes from the heart about the questions of her daily existence: love, faith, doubt, discontent. I think that will always be relevant. Jane’s life was full of contradictions, for example, she was a woman of deep faith and spirituality who often found herself at odds with established religion. I think that will feel accessible to anyone who doesn’t feel that they fit neatly into any of society’s boxes. She was woman who doubted herself, and who was vulnerable about that doubt and hesitation. In a way, her poetry gives the reader permission to feel weak and insufficient, but then to come out of that with a stronger sense of themselves and their potential.” Her lyrics for “I Am No Artist” are a perfect example of this. (Hear the song on YouTube.)
“I think it’s easy to dismiss idealism as naïve, but Jane found her guiding stars -- peace, justice, truth -- and shaped her life around them. It takes courage to live without a pre-defined script, and I think having mentors and models like Clement, who did have that courage, can open the way for others.”
“The most obvious commonality is that Becca and Jane are both artists, and both women whose approach to their art – honest, vulnerable, humble, whole-hearted – is also their approach to life. Reading the book almost feels like listening in on a conversation between two women who, although outwardly very different, inwardly share so much.”
The book also contains compelling images from three different sources: the nature photography was taken by Jane Tyson Clement’s son, Tim Clement; the photos of Becca were taken at her home – a safe, intimate space (The videos that accompany the book were also all shot in Becca’s home, and a few of the images in the book are stills from the videos); finally, the photographs of Clement, provided by the Clement family, open each chapter with a collage of imagery and found items that give an impression of each stage of Jane’s life.
“Jane’s poetry is a steady source of inspiration,” says Becca Stevens. "When I'm writing at home and I hit writer's block, I often go to that shelf to draw inspiration for a song. Sometimes the poetry ends up being the lyrics, and other time just inspiration I draw from the words. If I could meet Jane Clement today, I would thank her for all the joy and creative fuel she's brought to my life and my songs."
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About the Authors


The Heart’s Necessities: Life in Poetry, by Jane Tyson Clement with Becca Stevens
The Lighthouse Band: