from aluminum
sky
into mere
photographs
where one’s
just dragged off
out of their
house
& then
this tiny town
gets its
quiet going again
first dust
scratch
before a
diamond needle
tricks into
the groove
goodbye pigeons
in the loop
what you
can’t hear
is what’s
watching you
As Maggie
Nelson writes as part of her back cover blurb, “bewildered, deep pleasure” is
an appropriate phrase when discussing American poet and filmmaker Joshua Marie Wilkinson’s latest trade poetry collection, Swamp Isthmus (Boston MA: Black Ocean, 2013). The second in his self-described No Volta pentalogy, Swamp Isthmus follows “the stripped, lyric voice” of Selenography (San Francisco CA: Sidebrow
Books, 2010) to continue a series of stripped threads that we most likely
haven’t yet seen the opposite ends of. The author of three previous poetry
collections—Suspension of a Secret in
Abandoned Rooms (Portland OR: Pinball Publishing, 2005), lug your careless body out of the careful
dusk (Iowa City, Iowa: University of Iowa Press, 2006) and the
collaborative Figures for a Darkroom
Voice (with Noah Eli Gordon, Tarpaulin Sky Press)—the two volumes that now
make up nearly the first half of his No
Volta articulate a series of abstracts that bleed into each other. How is
it that the pentalogy has become a version of the new normal, from Steve Ross Smith’s five-volume (so far) fluttertongue,
or the three volumes so far that Erín
Moure has translated into English from the Galician of Chus Pato’s projected pentalogy, Method? Wilkinson’s work
in Swamp Isthmus continue his
trajectory of the serial poem/sequence through seven serial poem-sections, but
compose short-lined lyric fragments as opposed to what previously would have
been more linear, and even more narrative, in comparison. Wilkinson invokes the
musicality of the short lyric, spaces both human and rural (and both), and
illuminates the smallest moments. Less than a portrait than evokes an entire,
building landscape, the musicality of the line often informs the language, as
he writes: “I am sorry I want / a sloe plum” (“A Droplight”), or later on,
writing “aspirin uncoils in soda water” (“A Saint among the Stragglers’ Beds”).
Throughout Swamp Isthmus, Wilkinson’s
lyrics bleed everything into everything else, and the divisions between worlds,
bodies, geographies and concepts become impossible to distinguish, deliberately
merging threads of violence, magic, pastoral, mail carriers, blood and water.
What might the final shape of his No
Volta be?
another code fathoms
forth
& its
messenger at the river
cored like an
apple
I guide them
to a wind
which summons
the forest
from a man
named Ashley
& a boy
he called Small
by lampmatch
to hydrangeas
a fold for
disappeared ones
as this ink
marks
a six on the
back of your hand
it smudges
your chin in the rain
& what
they’ve said breaks into bats
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