I couldn’t hold lots of
things. I could hold people but how in hand how people. What peopling. Idea of
what not to hold. Land cast deeper into unknown more known, more demarcated instance,
less we knew. Less the memory of the place. It held lots of things and it did
hold people. From far I walk on mountain shrunk, dry purple descending closest
to eye world. Eye held things, temple of phrases. Margin fractal that’s how
memory holds, it held people and land but congealed. Shadow emulsified which
held the non-light, the profession of desire. Syllables into the planet, they
hold the DNA of the words. Our lives held on the secret in the word. Articulate
lives. When escaping with the birds held in the air. I should have poured your
water, that which held you. (“Flow state”)
From Kingston, New York poet, editor and publisher Ryan Skrabalak comes the full-length Goes on now except) (Brooklyn NY: Beautiful Days Press, 2026), produced as “Beautiful Days Press #15,” a title that follows his debut, National Lube (speCt!, 2024) and chapbooks including The Orchids (above/ground press, 2025) and ASSEMBLED CLIMATE (Oxeye Press, 2026). Curiously, Goes on now except) begins with more than two pages of blurbs, which is slightly distracting (but not the worst thing) before a table of contents that reveals a structure as a kind of call-and-response: thirteen extended poem-sections that begin with the title section, with the same title repeated alternately, until the final section, with interspersed sections titled “Topographic lattice nothing,” “Realpeople mixolydian culvert (in 16mm),” “Stochastic roygbivcurve,” “Gnawa nebula antipolis (dendritic version),” “Deer lung programme” and “Universal human remote.” A call-and-response, but also a book-length suite of individual fragments, prose poems, lyric sketches and individual lines built up as an extended, ongoing kind of lyric structure. Blending meditative stretches and gestural sketches, punchy lines and a sense of ongoingness, of lyric cadence and an adherence to the very sound of the recombinant, repeating line and image. At the beginning of the collection, as he writes:
Write a music. Write slow a music more of with more no world, with things arranged. Things rearranged in no. world with no question (past, as night) in the mode of your fog. so that the fog was suited for your music and you made it with. Not owned. That’s your sense of this world, that music (past, suited for night). Vague fog. Which we find trampled with familiar music. Feeling this form in the sky, then the question
of the sky, sky music.
Perhaps the notion of the recombinant, utilized here for purposes of mangling sound, lyric, measure and meaning, is less overtly structured and one set with a particular flow, but the effect is striking, either way. The very blend of repetitions manage such clear, gestural sweeps, akin to individual monologues, if you will, the performative element of the prose poems providing the lyric intersperses a kind of Greek chorus, offering asides to help further the main body of text. Each section, also, a lyric sketch-form in italics, offering that section’s table in contents in a kind of fragmented verse. Are these poems, or simply markers? Either way, the structure provides a pull, a through-line, across the full body of the text, stretched out taut in both directions, even through and across such stagger, staccato phrases and repeats. Or, as in the fourth section, as he offers:
Step out extending upon shit aware of vibrating
lie a thought
invoicing the duplex wind
. man . The sun .
structure of this overuse of dream
they’re all country .
They’re all
duplicated with a heaven
of SHOW HIDDEN COMMENTS


