“[D]esigned and sewn by Dawn Pendergast in
Houston, Texas,” the little red leaves textile series produces some of the most
attractive poetry chapbooks I’ve seen in a while [see my previous reviews of
their titles here and here and here], hand-sewn with recycled textiles
including bedsheets and other fabrics. Produced in limited edition, these are
beautifully-made, and more than worth their weight (I might even be slightly biased, since one of the earlier chapbooks in this series was something of mine, but I don’t really think so).
In her most recent package, Pendergast sent
along Dan Thomas-Glass’ Kate & Sonia
(2011), Megan Kaminski’s GEMOLOGY (2012),
Lee Gough’s Future Occupations
(2012), Kevin Varrone’s Eephus (from Box Score) (2012), Todd Melicker’s King & Queen (2012), Mac Wellman’s The Rat Minaret (2012) and Rachel Blau DuPlessis’ Draft 108: Ballad and Gloss (2012). It seems as though her
productivity has been increasing over the past year or two, which is
impressive, especially when one considers that every copy of every book is
hand-sewn by the editor/publisher herself.
Something’s always doubling the double.
Shadows of trace remain intent.
Something explores its own excess.
Something pulses, never spent.
Littler and littler,
seely after seely
only a fine-meshed, mesh-fine net
can deal with this kind of real. Really.
Poetic technology always registers
smallness in the count.
With large-bore machinery, tiny details
are filtered through and out. (Rachel Blau DuPlessis, Draft 108: Ballad and Gloss)
Ottawa poet Monty Reid keeps reminding me (as
though I needed reminding of such) that chapbooks are the ground level of where
the best writing is actively happening. I’m paraphrasing, if only slightly; how
could I ever disagree with him? If he’d seen any of these chapbooks, he’d most
likely be even more certain. But what I’m really
looking forward to is more work by Pendergast herself [see my reviews of such here and here]; when might that be happening?
Sonia screams against the order
days insist on packing
into the stretch: minor
impossibilities like toes
arched up to generate
space straining to switch
the switch. This possible world
Sonia screams against. I
glance at Kate—where are
our options? To lift
or light? Shushing by
reflex my art motions
toward quiet. (Dan Thomas-Glass, Kate
& Sonia)
Subtitled “in the months / before our second /
daughter’s birth,” Dan Thomas-Glass’ Kate
& Sonia (2011) is a meditation on the imminent birth of his second
daughter, a subject far too common in poetry, yet rarely done well. I’m
interested in writing on parenting, yet have noticed that the poems on
motherhood (some of the finest from New York poet Rachel Zucker) far outweigh the poems
on fatherhood, nearly to the exclusion of the latter. “Kate, Sonia I wanted to
write / a poem for you that a mother would write,” he writes, to open the third
section, nearly echoing the sentiment. The poem writes out, as his bio confirms,
“his wife Kate and their daughters Sonia and Alma (born 9/21/11).” Parenting is
a powerful thing, and too often I’ve seen the dismissal of father-specific
writing, and even the fear of attempting such. A sequence of eleven poems plus
epilogue, his meditation focuses on the small, and the close-to-home, as a kind
of sketchbook of thoughts during his wife’s second pregnancy. As the final
pre-epilogue poem ends, “Sonia I am sorry for all this moment’s failures.” I’m
glad Thomas-Glass has produced this; not as physical, obviously, as motherhood,
how does fatherhood become so easily dismissed?
Rachel Blau DuPlessis has been composing her ongoing
poem “Draft” for some time, so far collected in five trade volumes. The second
of DuPlessis’ “Draft” poems to appear as a little red leaves chapbook (her
chapbook Draft 96: Velocity appeared
in 2011 [see my review of such here]), this poem exists as a kind of call-and-response, composing a binary
piece; each poem is paired with an italicized addendum. Is this a
call-and-response, or something more akin to Greek chorus? Paired with the poem
quoted above is this, her italicized chorus:
I cannot solve what
is done in my name. they send 100 million to the killers from my insistent
taxes; I sent $500 to some other side. This has been going on for years now.
Cannot solve, cannot absolve… And “orange” is not an absolute; it has been worked
with—for it itself is generally hybrid. It comes from bud unions and tree
grafts and sometimes spontaneous mutations. Fusions of root-stock with
something from elsewhere. Much more rarely from seeds. What then counts as
“normal”?
The collage aspect of the piece picks from
multiple sources, and her “Drafts” have lengthened since the poem first
started, years ago. An interesting question: has anyone attempted to write
critically of her “Drafts” work as a whole unit?
Dear cabbie, dear comfort
perchance could you drive faster
ruefully abide your own speaking space
we’ll wrangle sweet nothings through that
window if you like it’s only plexiglass
my dear plastic really that keep us apart
just split the avenue open vivisect districts
flower shops mechanics pantries
glow orange green silver as we pass (Megan Kaminski, GEMOLOGY)
Author of four previous chapbooks and the trade
collection Desiring Map (2012) [seemy review of such here], Lawrence, Kansas poet Megan Kaminski’s GEMOLOGY (2012) is a letter to the city,
writing out her neighbourhood in a sequence of short lyrics. “Vowels roll drip
down thighs / conjunctions across backs,” she writes, later continuing: “Name
me modesty / name me vexation[.]” Kaminski’s immediate city is as sensual as it
is physical, composing a lyric love letter for a neighbourhood and even city
unspecified. Does her love lie in the immediate physicality of wherever she
hangs her hat?
Dear night, dear misplaced images
blanketed silver singed crystalline
cold I gather icicles sew flack jackets
encase late night wonderings
parks shadowed sharply street-lit
dear avenue if I follow floor me
carry me and my lost children
wordspent gangrened unburied (Megan Kaminski, GEMOLOGY)
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