Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Friday, September 14, 2012
Four Great Titles From New York Quarterly Books
My second book, Lapse
Americana, is due out from New York Quarterly Books on February 2. In the
meantime, here are four of my favorite titles already out from NYQ Books:
These poems are simultaneously tough-minded and
tender-hearted. For example, check out the opening lines of “A Typical Day 31
Years Ago”:
was
watching my mother die.
Part
of the tumor that would
eventually
strangle her
came
out of her mouth
like
a cheap party trick,
just
in time for the feast
of
the epiphany.
Weil’s Catholicism (see his brilliant two-part essay on that
topic on The The Poetry Blog) leads him to a poetics that emphasizes the
sacramental and the incarnated. The poems abound with physical detail, real
images of real life that point to the paradoxical dignity we find in bearing
the indignity of humanity. The poems are direct and smart. This may just be the
best book of poetry I have read this year.
This book makes me think of C.S. Lewis’s observation that
the sonnet sequences of the 16th century were not narrative but rather
“symphonic.” I think what Lewis meant is that the background story (whether
Shakespeare’s love triangle with the “Dark Lady” and “Young Man” or Sidney as
Astrophel in love with Stella) is felt rather than followed. That symphonic
effect is certainly evident in After the
Ark, which has as its background story the marital dissolution of the
poet’s parents and the death of his mother. Johnson doesn’t give us a blow by
blow account of the end of that marriage or of the end of his mother’s life;
rather he invites us into the emotional landscape of a family’s collapse. The
result of this technique is that we are moved along with the poet. He doesn’t
dictate to us what he felt; he invites us along for the emotional ride. Much of
this emotion is conveyed through powerful images, doing much to revive Eliot’s
concept of the “objective correlative.” Consider the last two lines of
“Pageant, Christmas Eve”: “Houselights snuffed, the dark became an empty /
ribcage, the tree our flickering heart.” Wow! Another very effective image is
that at the end of “Flood” in which, sitting beneath a tin roof listening to
the rain, the mourners for Johnson’s mother “put her shoes outside and watched
them fill.” That is a powerful image of absence and loss.
Maybe I should declare up front that Amanda Bradley is a
friend of mine from graduate school. But then again, so what? I have lots of
friends whose books I don’t like, and I simply avoid reviewing them. Amanda has
saved me a lot of awkwardness by writing a very good book. The best description
of this book is probably its title, which captures well the unique blend of the
harrowing and the whimsical that one finds throughout Oz at Night. A great example is “To Thomas Pynchon Regarding The Crying of Lot 49,” which would seem
to inaugurate a new kind of poem: the academic confessional. Recalling the
agony of digging through Pynchon’s book, she says, “Was that on purpose? I want
to punch / your reclusive face. Where are you, Pynchon?” The poem is funny,
especially to anyone who has struggled with the intellectual demands of
academic work, but it is also very personal. Finding herself lost in a maze of
critical theory and interpretation, she ends with the confession that “by page
111, I couldn’t believe myself.” This is
a witty poem on the academic life, but it is also a very brave poem about
self-doubt. In some ways it reminded me of Ginsberg’s “America,” and I wanted
to add “It occurs to me that I am Thomas Pynchon./ I am talking to myself
again.” Other poems in the collection wrestle with the same issues of identity and
self-doubt. In “I am not what I would like to be nor what I will become,” she
says “I am not Matt Damon, nor someone who carries an alligator purse.” This is
a very striking way of addressing identity and the painful process of deriving
it by means of negation. The poems in Oz
at Night are not confessional in the Plath, Sexton, Lowell mode, but they
do leave one with the impression that Oz is an internal landscape, as
simultaneously alien and familiar as the depths of our own minds revealed in
dreams.
Margrave offers something rarely seen in contemporary
poetry: wit. It’s not just that the book is often funny, though it is. I mean
“wit” in the seventeenth-century sense, the play of intellect. “Perishable” is
a good example of this quality. Margrave
begins the poem with a description of cleaning out his recently deceased father’s
refrigerator and ends with the observation that “a man is more perishable than
his food.” The poem has certain Donne-like qualities, the witty conceit and the
memento mori. Indeed, memento mori – the medieval and Renaissance
trope of calling to mind one’s impending death – is the unifying theme of this
book. Margrave treats this theme with humor and genuine pathos.
I will most likely recommend more from NYQ Books in the
months ahead. In the meantime, if you want to get a better sense of the
philosophy behind the operation, see me review of editor Raymond Hammond’sbook, Poetic Amusement. Or, better
yet, buy a copy of Poetic Amusement
and read it yourself.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Anna Myers (my mom) receives the Arrell Gibson Lifetime Achievement Award from the Oklahoma Center for the Book
INTRODUCTION
Near
the beginning of her masterly novel, Fire
in the Hills, Anna Myers gives us this exchange between young Hallie and
her dying mother:
“Ma,” said the girl, trying not to scream. “Ma, you can’t
die.”
“We all do, child. We all do. There is worst things. Sing
to me, Hallie.
It will rest us
both.” (2)
This brief bit of
dialogue sums up much that is great about my mother’s work. Her novels are
rooted in the common human lot of suffering, in the ties that bind us together
even in the hardest of times, and in the universal song that transcends the
sorrow: “Sing to me, Hallie. It will rest us both.” Anna Myers comes from folks
who know suffering and from folks who know how to tell a story, a long line of
yarn-spinners and survivors. Thus, her books often begin with sadness, like the
gut-wrenching first line of Red Dirt
Jessie – “My sister Patsy is dead” – or the heart-rending execution scene
with which she opens Spy, her account
of the life and death of Nathan Hale. This story structure, this motion from
pain to the pleasure of narrative, reminds us that the stories we tell are born
from our sorrows and that our strength to face such sorrow is often born from
the stories we tell.
When these stories belong to all of us, we call them
“history,” and much of my mother’s career has been dedicated to bringing
history alive in narrative. Red Dirt
Jessie, is set during the Great Depression, a stark backdrop to mirror the
emotional depravation of its young protagonist and her father. In Assassin, the turmoil of the Civil War
matches the inner turmoil of young adulthood as Bella wrestles with her
identity, the possibilities of good and evil in her young soul a microcosm of
the equally polar possibilities within her young country at a great moment of
crisis. Anna Myers knows that the stories we call history are the stories of
individual lives. In Rosie’s Tiger, Rosie
herself says so:
I didn’t understand much of what the newsmen said.
It took me the
longest time to get it straight that
the United States was mad at
North Korea and wanted to help South
Korea. But all along I
understood that Ronny
might not come home. When I set two
plates out on the table for super,
I’d look at his empty chair and
be so
awful afraid it might stay empty, always.
My mother’s novels
remind us that the stories we share as history are stories of empty chairs and
of changed lives. Her work reminds us that the big events on the world stage
matter most on the individual level: the 1878 Yellow Fever epidemic matters to
a boy most in the form of his lost family; the great Galveston Flood of 1900
matters to a little girl most in the form of her lost friend; even World War II
matters most to a girl from Oklahoma in the form of her missing father. This
humane understanding of history reminds us why it is so crucial to know where
we have been; it instructs us on how to think most deeply about where we may be
going.
Such an approach to story-telling is a contribution to the
sympathetic imagination of the reader. When we read about richly imagined
characters facing challenges that, no matter how fantastic or unusual, have
some element of the struggles of reality in them, then we become better at
imagining the thoughts and feelings of others, great literature’s contribution
to the moral good coming not in the form of maxims and rules but in the form of
refined empathy. Like Homer’s Odysseus, my mother’s characters are shaped by
the suffering that is common to humanity, that is shared among us all. In Fire in the Hills, Hallie’s own capacity
for sympathy is expanded when she learns of the sorrows that shaped Mary Jones:
Hallie trembled as she passed the jar. She was over-whelmed.
Mary,
even Mary Jones, had churnings inside her,
feelings she had laid out
there in the lamplight. The
ache in the girl was magnified. It was
an ache for Mary and her lost Lucy, for little
Dovie who muttered
‘Ma’ in her sleep, and most of all for herself, mortally
wounded,
but unable to say so. Tentatively she laid her hand on
the woman’s
shoulder, and Mary patted it as she swigged down the
yellow elixir.
The sort of connection
my mother describes in these beautifully restrained words is the sort of connection
forged again and again between her readers and her characters. It is a feeling
that makes us all better equipped to love our neighbors as ourselves.
My mother’s finely drawn characters have lived out their
stories in various corners of this country – Memphis to Massachusetts – but her
work has again and again returned to speak of the particularly Oklahoman brand
of character and of suffering. Auden said of Yeats that “Mad Ireland hurt him
into poetry.” When I read, in Tulsa
Burning, of the struggles of young Nobe Chase, I think a similar dynamic
might explain my mother as an Oklahoman writer. But this place has done more
than hurt my mother; it has also gifted her with a kind of emotional honesty
that rejects sentimentality, a sense of optimism without a blindness to
reality, and a belief in the existence of human goodness despite our history of
violence. All of these characteristics are evident in Nobe’s words as he stands
at the grave of his abusive father:
I started to think that maybe Pa was in heaven
after all. It would
sure take God to understand a man
like him. I figured if Pa was up
there, he’d likely be able to look down and know
the words that I
wished I could say. (149)
If mad Oklahoma hurt my
mother into poetry, it also touched her with its rugged beauty, gave her a
prose as clear and strong as summer wind over the prairie. And lucky for us it
did.
Anna Myers’ accomplishments are too numerous to name here
in their entirety. She is the author of 19 novels for young readers. She is a
four time winner of the Oklahoma Book Award: for Spy in 2009, Assassin in
2006, Graveyard Girl in 1996, and Red Dirt Jessie in 1993. She is a
finalist again this year, for her latest book, The Grave Robber’s Secret. She won the Parents' Choice Award in
1996, for Fire in the Hills and
the Gamma State Author's Award, 1997, for Graveyard Girl. In
1998, she won the Children's Book of the Year Award from Bank Street
College for The Keeping Room. Other
honors include the Honor Book Award, Society of School Librarians
International, 1999-2000, and Gamma State Author's Award, 2000, both for Ethan
between Us; another Honor Book Award, Society of School Librarians
International, 2001-02, for When the Bough Breaks; a Notable Social
Studies Trade Books for Young People citation from the Children's Book
Council/National Council for the Social Studies, 2003 for Tulsa Burning; and yet another Honor Book Award, along with the
Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award, 2004-05, for Tulsa Burning.
Her books have been named to such
prestigious lists as “New York Public Library’s Best Books for the Teenaged,”
“New York Public Library’s Best 100 Books to Read and Share,” “Bank Street
College’s Best Children’s Books,” “ALA Quick Pick List” and “Independent Book
Sellers Pick of the List.” She has been included more than twenty times on the
children’s choice lists for various states. And, perhaps most importantly, has
received innumerable letters from young readers, both avid and reluctant,
praising her compelling stories and relatable protagonists. It is no surprise
to me that she now joins Rilla Askew, Joy Harjo, S.E. Hinton, Bill Wallace, N.
Scott Momaday, and so many other great writers in winning this prestigious
award.
My
mother often tells me how proud she is of me; she’s that kind of mother. But
tonight I want to say how proud I am of my mother, not just for the list of
accomplishments I just read to you but also for what these accomplishments and
her work itself, say about who she is. Like Hallie Horton, she’s a fighter and
a survivor. She doesn’t give up, ever. I saw that over the years I was growing
up and she was honing her craft, writing each night, watching the mailbox for
news, continually starting again and working on. I saw it as she struggled
alongside my father against cancer. I’ve seen it again as she has stood
alongside my sisters and me in our own personal challenges. I’ve seen that look
in her eye, a look I saw also in her mother’s eye, that says I can be hurt, I
can be wounded and scarred, but I can’t be overcome. For as long as I can
remember my mother has been reciting to me, in bits and pieces as appropriate,
this poem by Langston Hughues:
MOTHER TO
SON
Well, son, I'll tell you:
Life for me ain't been no crystal stair.
It's had tacks in it,
And splinters,
And boards torn up,
And places with no carpet on the floor—
Bare.
But all the time
I'se been a-climbin' on,
And reachin' landin's,
And turnin' corners,
And sometimes goin' in the dark
Where there ain't been no light.
So, boy, don't you turn back.
Don't you set down on the steps.
'Cause you finds it's kinder hard.
Don't you fall now—
For I'se still goin', honey,
I'se still climbin',
And life for me ain't been no crystal stair.
Life for me ain't been no crystal stair.
It's had tacks in it,
And splinters,
And boards torn up,
And places with no carpet on the floor—
Bare.
But all the time
I'se been a-climbin' on,
And reachin' landin's,
And turnin' corners,
And sometimes goin' in the dark
Where there ain't been no light.
So, boy, don't you turn back.
Don't you set down on the steps.
'Cause you finds it's kinder hard.
Don't you fall now—
For I'se still goin', honey,
I'se still climbin',
And life for me ain't been no crystal stair.
In her eighth grade English class, my mother had me memorize
that poem, but what I really committed to memory, what I really got from my
mother is that through art, through its transcendent beauty and infectious
compassion, we make our suffering into something more. In our stories, we climb,
even when the way is hard. Even as we celebrate a lifetime’s worth of
achievement tonight, my mother is climbing still.
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Two poems, "Odin" and "Trampoline," from the new book appear in the latest issue of the fantastic DMQ Review, along with some new poems by Robert Bly. Check out the issue here.
Friday, March 30, 2012
Poem in the Current Issue of Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review
Read my poem "Loss" in the current issue of Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review.
The issue also contains a fine poem by Dean Rader (along with a review of his Works & Days) and a great review of Alan Berecka's Remembering the Body.
The issue also contains a fine poem by Dean Rader (along with a review of his Works & Days) and a great review of Alan Berecka's Remembering the Body.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Poem in Iron Horse Literary Review
The latest issue of the Iron Horse Literary Review includes my poem, “Cedars.” The poem recounts cutting Eastern Red Cedars with my father to sell as Christmas trees at the flea-market when I was a kid. The poem will also be included in my book Lapse Americana, due out next year from New York Quarterly Books.
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