
Three Reviews
by
Charles P. Ries
On
a good day luck dropped three quality books of poetry in my mail box:
MIGHTY GOOD LAND by Dan Powers, SHORTS by John Lehman
and PLAYING TENNIS WITH ANTONNIONI by Alan Catlin. As I read
these writers I was struck by what opportunity the poetic form offers
us; not just for expression, but for experimentation. Powers, Lehman,
and Catlin all write with eloquence, yet in styles that are quite
dissimilar. They hail from different parts of the United States; one
from the Midwest, the other from the South, and the other a true blue
Easterner. These geographic distinctions can be heard in their poetry.
In addition, each uses line structure very differently, but to good
purpose. I liked all three of these books, but for very different
reasons.
MIGHTY GOOD LAND
By: Dan Powers
52 Poems / 103 Pages / $12.95
Black Greyhound Media
P.O. Box 40367
Nashville, TN 37204
I found
it hard to believe that this was Dan Powers' first published book
of poetry. These straightforward narrative poems are told with restraint
and clarity. Mighty Good Land is all about the people and places
in Powers' life; his wife, his father, his children, the farm, the
church, the home. They mirror the reflections many of us have as we
look over the landscape of our life. This is an excerpt from, Good
Earth and Poor.
"The
seasons and the planting of seed by nature the true work of our father
who never owned the piece of land he wanted, but it was near, past
the end of our field, and through the seasons he watched it fall piece
by piece into the hands of the subdividers. And with the half-smile
of given-up desire, he would say, 'That was mighty good land.' And
he would say it softly to no one but himself while he held his hands
dug deep into his pockets."
And
another from, Half-Light Off the Appalachian Trail.
"I
drive home as if alone, blind in rain and headlights, you far away
in stillness on your dark side of the truck, the wipers slapping rhythm
to the cold silences piling up between us like a mountain we can see
over, can climb, won try as long as it's raining."
There
is no secret code language or illusive imagery in these poems. The
writer is personally revealing with words that are clear-spoken. This
is a fine first book with poems reflecting a southern sensibility.
SHORTS
101 Brief Poems of Wonder and Surprise
By: John Lehman
101 Poems / 95 Pages / $11.95
Zelda Wilde Publishing
315 Water Street
Cambridge, WI 53523
ISBN-13: 078-0-9741728-2-8
The
poetry in this collection is easy to read and assimilate; the themes
are anchored in the Midwest, but the conclusions are universal in
significance. They have a Haiku feel about them, starting the reader
in one place and leaving them suspended in another. Lehman is the
master of the understatement, as well as the third and most critical
element of poetry, the ending. With great skill he takes a collection
of common moments and elevates them.
Many
Haiku poets choose to limit the quantity of the offerings in a particular
book or collection, wanting to give each poem space to reverberate
with afterglow. In Shorts, Lehman made the choice to pack them
in - 101 to be exact. I feel the sheer volume may have diluted the
overall impact of the book.
In
his preface, Lehman notes, "Shorts is the first book comprised
entirely of justified poems. This new form which I originated, capitalizes
on the dynamics between the spoken sentence and this intentionally-chosen
line break." I am always a bit suspicious when a writer says
they created a new form. I realize poetry more than any other form
of writing is subject to the art of formatting (shall we call it an
obsession). But in this case Lehman's form serves its function well
and presents his work without the distraction of more ornate formatting
strategies.
Here
are two examples of Lehman's justified poem (which I can't quite do
justice to because my right margins are a bit ragged-edged; his are
not):
After My Son's Divorce
Clouds above mountains
form precipitous ranges
in the sky. Moss-headed
Salmon struggle upstream
to lay their eggs then die.
We head on motorcycles
toward Turnagain Point.
I wonder how far. And he
wonders why.
Another Sub-Zero Night
Once there were birds, I tell my pup,
a sun to warm your face and amazing
things called flowers, that would grow.
She shivers and urinates on the snow.
This expansive collection of short narrative poems is nimble and wise.
Learned technique and keen observational skill make this an enjoyable
read. One can almost visualize Lehman's notebook crammed with quick
descriptions of the life around him, which fall under his expert hand
into Shorts.
PLAYING TENNIS WITH ANTONIONI
By: Alan Catlin
27 Poems / 62 Pages / $15
March Street Press
3413 Wilshire
Greensboro, North Carolina 27408
ISBN: 1-5966-021-2
Poets
find food for reflection in many things. These creative prompts direct
the themes and associations of their work. In, Playing Tennis With
Antonioni, Alan Catlin lands upon a charmed idea. He marries the
movies. In doing so, his poems become a cinematic off-spring of sorts.
This collection is imagery-rich as it sews together, often colliding
unions. The titles of Catlin's poems are telling:
Kurosawas Deliverance
L. Wertmullers Seven Beauties, Muscle Beach Bikini Party
Alfred Hitchcocks To Hell and Back
Scorseses Blair Witch Project
Truffauts Mighty Joe Young Revisited
Here is an excerpt from Kubrick's Dawn of the Living
Dead:
1
Transcendent creatures
existing out of time,
spirits of the dead
walking; zombies
for designer footwear,
clothes, invade a
shopping mall.
2
Omega man on
The run, there is
Nowhere to hide:
Full metal jackets,
Body armor piercing
Round are of no
Use, the dead keep
Walking, legions of
Them like the Roman
Armies sent to war.
These
are highly developed works. Most I would characterize as word poems.
They move down the page with spare uncluttered prose reflecting the
associations bubbling out of the writers mind. Catlin is particularly
adept at this, and I was glad to see him take this leap from his more
narrative work. This is a nice study in blending siblings of the same
cinematic parent.
________________
©Copyright 2006 by Charles
P. Ries
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