A
NEW COURSE
Nobody thought about
the fish. Stranded in parking lots, ball diamonds, soccer pitches. In
basements. Backhoe buckets. A kitchen sink. A toilet bowl, severed from its
gasket. An overturned bass drum. A firepit. The trunk of a Toyota Tercel. A
little red wagon. A large black boot. A bassinet. A toy box. A suitcase. A
child’s wading pool. A tire swing. Concerned officials and willing children
picked them up and rinsed them off, launching them down their raw new
limnographies.
Calgary writer and family doctor Monica Kidd’s third poetry collection and sixth trade book is The Year of Our Beautiful Exile (Kentville NS: Gaspereau Press, 2015), a collection of short lyric observations
composed during, as the title suggests, a year’s worth of travel with her
family. The poems in The Year of Our
Beautiful Exile are deceptively straightforward, suggesting a straight
travel-narrative of sites visited and experiences felt and observed, instead
utilizing those same ideas and stories to construct poems that, more often than
not, instead focus on cadence, structure and sound. Where I think her poems are
the most interesting are when she plays with form and line-lengths, including her
forays into the prose-poem, which I’ve long considered some of her strongest
writing. Some of the material that falls into her poems in this collection include
being displaced by the 2013 Alberta flood, evolution, natural formations of
earth, a variety of historical tidbits, and quotes from Walt Whitman, Jan Zwicky, Don McKay and others. Utilized as a form through which to process the
world, this is a collection of poems composed as Kidd’s best thinking form,
attempting to make sense of the hows and the whys and the whats included over
an extended period away, aware of the arbitrariness of what exactly that
means. “And what is a year?,” her opening Woody Guthrie quote asks. In the long
run, perhaps little; perhaps far more than you’d think, helping reshape all
that comes after.
SHAKESPEARE
Summoning his inner
bard, the mayor put out a call for nouns to describe on national television
those who would walk the banks of the river in flood. (Later, a clause was
enacted allowing the substitution of compelling descriptors.) Diaper licker. Hammer
sack. Buzzard briner. Sharp as a heap of sawdust. Quick as a set of square
tires. Cousin lover. Lost as a drunken cherry. Jug plucker. Cow tipper. This,
of course, was many weeks after His Worship sat beside me at a play about Will
being slaughtered by zombies. And that, gentle reader, is as true a story as
they come.
The
poems in this collection suggest that it is a transitional work, between what Kidd has published previously, working through a series of explorations toward
what she might end up producing in the future. Despite some weaker moments
scattered throughout, this is a strong collection of lyric poems, all of which
make me curious about what she might be working on next.
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