HEAT
A row of little ovens
waits on the cliff.
I can’t wait to get
inside.
Mother me, dry heat.
Bake me into a baby.
(Emily Kendal Frey)
While
in Florida, we wandered through the occasional bookstore, and I managed to pick
up a copy of the most recent issue of Black Warrior Review (fall/winter 2013; 40.1). There are so many American
journals I’ve only heard of, and haven’t managed to yet see, a constant
frustration of the international border between us One thing I didn’t know
about the journal, as the colophon reads: “Black
Warrior Review is named after the river that borders the campus of The University
of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. The city, river, and journal derive their names from
the sixteenth-century Indian chief Tuscaloosa, whose name comes from two words
of Creek or Choctaw origin—tusca (warrior)
and lusa (black).” I’m struck by a
number of the selections in this issue—writing from such familiar names as Emily Kendal Frey, Bianca Stone and Julia Cohen—as well as some names I hadn’t previously
been familiar with, including Wendy Xu, John Zackel or Adam Atkinson, for his “jacket
copy” series, three of which are included in the issue. Atkinson’s three pieces
are strange, and strangely compelling and entertaining, even if every element
in each poem might not work. They’re certainly worth the trip, and certainly
intrigue; I wonder how far he’s planning on taking this suite of unusual poems?
Jacket Copy for The Cop Followed Frank Into the Diner
The definite
article in this book’s title is to be eyed suspiciously. This poet highlights
many and any cops, Franks, diners, and followings into. For instance: “The cop
frankly dined on / the fellow.” Or: “It follows that Frank copped a feel.” Or: “Diner:
3 A.M. / Cops from the vice squad / with weary sadistic eyes / spotting
fairies.” At times, it plays like bathroom humor, if the bathroom was at
Stonewall Inn and stuffed full with lubricated bodies: “The cop’s forearm
followed his fist / into Frank’s asshole. A fist appeared through a portal
twenty years from now and nailed / a cop in the kisser.”
What
really struck in the issue included some of the prose, far more lyric than what
I’ve encountered in most literary journals these days, from John Zackel’s short
story, “The Potential Energy of Mr. English,” to Ben Roberts’ “Snapshots from
the Wedding,” which includes:
There were those who
arrived in the early morning hours before the Wedding. Others had waited in
that place some thirty and three years. Here is the appointed hour: three in
the Post Meridian. No one who came even a minute after was admitted. The Wedding
waited on no one but the Bride and the Groom. For it is written, ‘No one shall
arrive late to the Wedding.’ It is as if you had not come at all.
Given
how particular I am about prose these days, I’m intrigued in the flavour of the
prose in the pages of this journal, most of which is far more interesting
stylistically than most of the far-too-straight examples of prose I see in
literary journals. A further highlight was Julia Cohen’s “I Cannot Name It, It
Lives,” listed under non-fiction. Cohen’s piece begins:
You are the splintered
cloud of wood. Hum of halogen, a stutter strikes your microcosm’s sharp
connector thorn. Home & the uncut call?
The density of a word,
its cellular level I poke intricately awake. Indigenous to repetition. A girl
drains an object. Your full sink & floating asparagus tips.
Object painted with
asthma attacks. Object between relationships. Frozen object taken out of the
freezer.
No comments:
Post a Comment