I don’t know
what to say about him.
He is no
longer a phantasm,
But not yet a
sign.
The seagulls
have taken residence
in the
grocery parking lot.
Their squawks
and squeals
each morning
circling the block.
He lives by
the ocean.
There is just
a pretend one here.
There is a
beach. And I can stand there
on the edge
amid the wind and wave breaks
and say to
myself: “I am the ocean.”
Perhaps he
has sent the gulls
to pretend
with me.
That would be
a sign. A recognition.
That’s the
kind of thing he’d do. (“TECHNOLOGIES”)
I was very
taken with Chicago poet and filmmaker Carrie Olivia Adams’ first trade poetry
collection when it came out, Intervening,Absence (Boise ID: Ahsahta Press, 2009) [see my review of such here], so
was enthused to see her second, finally, Forty-OneJane Doe’s (Boise ID: Ahsahta Press, 2013). Constructed in nine sections
with an accompanying dvd of short films, the first page opens: “She would begin
by predicting the weather.” Forty-OneJane Doe’s is a collection of voices and anonymity, attempting to shape an
absence, much the way Robert Kroetsch did through his narrator, Raymond,
seeking Rita Kleinhart in the poetry collection The Hornbooks of Rita K. (University of Alberta Press, 2001). In the
notes at the back of the collection, she tells us that the title section, the
eighth of the nine sections of the collection, “The Lives of the Forty-One Jane
Doe’s,” “Was inspired by the Forty One Jane Doe’s cocktail at the Violet Hour
in Chicago and is dedicated to its bartenders.” Adams composes her Jane Doe’s into the suggestion of Janes
as possibility, composing her collection as a polyphony not just of voice, but
of subject and purpose; sometimes Jane (whether the singular or plural Jane) is
lost in herself and her multiples, and other times, they are the bond which
holds all else together. Adams’ collage of Janes is centred around a multiplicity,
and not any single, straight line. Towards the end of the collection, the final
poem/section, “Voice Made Small,” begins: “My voice made small / travels with
others / along the copper wires.”
The Janes
sprang from monuments.
From city
plans; from bridge blue prints.
One day there
were high rise office buildings
and tenements
and grids
and alleyways
sunk under with rain water.
And the Janes
came with them.
Click clacking
across the pavement,
sidestepping subway
grates,
their heeled
teetering, a miraculous scene:
Amid this nonstop
flock of lookers,
witnesses in
tow,
children,
lovers, would be
Janets,
Jills, and Johns—
All women warn
you that they are trouble,
but the Janes
mean it.
(Though they’ll
apologize afterward.) (“The Lives of the Forty-One Jane Doe’s”)
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