If you’d like to play
prison, I’ll go out for milk.
You set the table for
the sum
of who you think
we should have been by
now.
Remember the cattle in
the freezer
the onions
and news.
Out in the yard,
the deeply-carved
initials let us know
we’re not the first
version,
so why whittle?
I have given up the
service.
So google me. (“WHAT
THEY WANT ME TO TELL YOU”)
In
Brooklyn, New York poet DJ Dolack’s first trade poetry collection, Whittling a New Face in the Dark (Black
Ocean, 2013) (a book he launched recently in Ottawa), he shows himself to be a
poet of careful attention. Dolack explores the lyric sentence and the density
of the free-floating line, stitching a collage of sharp poems together from
raggedy threads, phrases and fragments. His are sequences of pinpoints, and his
strength comes from his accuracy. “Night is coming in,” he writes in the poem “WHAT
THEY WANT ME TO TELL YOU,” “or you are moving towards it.” Situated in Dolack’s
New York City, Whittling a New Face in the Dark composing a dark and complex series of postcards, conditions, contradictions
and experiences that he never entirely falls prey to, his book is a love letter
to a complex geography, managing a personal and uplifting map. “Dawn is a color
/ I am condemned to describe:,” he writes, to open the poem “NYC POSTCARDS,”
writing of “father holding me / up close to the casket[.]” The postcards he
writes to his adopted city are multiple, and not just in the overt series of
poems throughout the collection titled “NYC POSTCARDS,” but a thread that runs
through the entire collection, grounding his admiration and love for a city he seems
to know far too well, warts and all.
HIS
LOVE WORKS THE DEAD LETTER OFFICE
When the letter is
sent, he walks the length of the pacing room and waits for word. The night
folds backward into the dimming house where the body accrues its memory. There is
laughing. The whole exaggerated wish of it going on and on. Some wiring beneath
his skin dimly warm. Birds flutter in from the chimney. He finds their feathers
have been gnarled by pirate birds who’ve intercepted and pillaged the words. All
of their breath coming at his face in heaves, exalts. He doesn’t know what she’s
received.
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