when all night longit pulls them down
Coming home from putting out a fire, how can they be expected to kiss the cheeks of their sleeping children and take out the leaking garbage and shuffle through the bills lying on the table and not drink the whiskey under the sink and spoon their wives while listening to their stories as well as their complaints and ask them questions and care about their answers and answer their questions and then sleep peacefully beside them without letting go when all night long it pulls them down, this threat and thrill of flame? (Hannah Rahimi, “Fragments,” HEADLIGHT #16)
One of the
rare student publications I follow regularly [see reviews of various previous volumes here] is HEADLIGHT anthology,
produced annually through the English Department at Montreal’s Concordia University. While I expect journals such as these to have a range of writing
and quality, being a student journal, and allowing for the possibility of
early/first publications for writers we might just hear some good or great
things later, I’m surprised at just how little in HEADLIGHT #15 (2012) really stood out (and why are there so many
blank pages inside the issue, including three in a row?). Does this say more of
the writing program at Concordia, long known for producing exciting writers and
writing, or the journal itself? It makes me wonder where writers such as Wanda O’Connor, currently at Concordia and producing exciting work are, and
whether or not writers such as she are even submitting?
The new volume, HEADLIGHT #16, includes a foreword by
Toronto poet and editor Sachiko Murakami, herself an alumni of the creative
writing program at Concordia. There were some interesting pieces here,
including a poem by former Ottawa poet Meredith Darling (who, for some reason,
is missing a bio at the end of the collection), intriguing lyric prose by Max Karpinski, a worthy lyric piece by Mark Lavorato, and some prose poems by Jesse
Anger and Hannah Rahimi. Rahimi’s striking two-part prose poem, “Fragments,”
according to the note, borrows lines from Anne Carson’s If Not, Winter, including them as italicized lines at the beginning
of each short section. Apart from the fact that her bio claims she moved to
Montreal from Toronto in 2008, I don’t know a single thing, but would like to
read more.
No Horizon
From the high backdune
all I could see was a bluish field scored by a lone tanker, faring cloud-swell –
the horizon snuffed by moods of slate and heron – wave and wake and stratus
ambled, eliding in the break. You were scanning the shallows that gathered in
rock shoals, hunting for fossils. When I asked if you could tell the sky from
the water, you narrowed your eye, bowed over your reflection. I turned where
beginning to ends and skipped a stone from cloud to cloud –. (Jesse Anger, HEADLIGHT #16)
And as far as Max
Karpinski’s prose is concerned, part of what appeals is seeing exactly where he
might go with this project, and whatever comes after. Striking prose is a
rarity, I find, and non-traditional prose in Canadian journals is even rarer,
especially when it’s done in an interesting way. I’m going to keep my ear out
for Max Karpinski.
We map the city’s
conclusions. The lines yokes us together. The shell’s whiteness contains us. Emptiness
demarcates limits or infinite vastness, the texture of this white noise described
in fricatives and gutturals. Phyllis your voice crackles like fireplace static.
A ring like emergency broadcast frequency. A presence like the radio. The street
dissolves into prairie. Cobblestone breccias translating green and yellow and
softness and brown and buzz of electric towers and wires. Pages emptied and
beckoning, trim like wet cement and null. Spine-hugging, the body finally
collapsed and sited. Phyllis, we are the opening and nothing is beginning. We are
the dead and we are breathing. We are breathing in your rooms, we are breathing
in your poems, we are breathing with you all. Pages and stretched thin as
bedsheets, write bodies in ink, between blots and scribbles we are breathing
with you all. (Max Karpinski, “Selections
from Oh?,” HEADLIGHT #16)
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