Given
our new baby distractions, I thought it might be worth going back through the
past few months and acknowledging the books over the past two years-plus that I
started to review, but, for whatever child-related reason, I wasn’t able to
complete as a longer, full-sized review. Here are some notes, if not even
regrets, on a couple of books that I wish I’d more time and attention to
properly discuss (as they each, obviously, deserve).
Kiki Petrosino, Hymn for the Black Terrific: American poet Kiki Petrosino’s second trade poetry collection, Hymn for the Black Terrific (Louisville KY: Sarabande Books, 2013)
is part of a vibrant, aural tradition of poetry that can’t help but lift itself
from the page. Her poems run the range of questioning, arguing and speaking
clearly, and are best experienced out loud, in a collection where her voice is clearly
there, inside your head. This is truly a remarkable collection by a remarkable
poet.
Ariana Reines, Mercury: There
aren’t that many 240 page-plus contemporary poetry collections, but American poet Ariana Reines manages such for her third trade collection, Mercury (New York NY: Fence Books,
2011). The author of The Cow (Alberta
Prize/Fence Books, 2006) [see my review of such here] and Coeur De
Lion (Fence Books, 2007), Reines’ Mercury, with its silver reflective
cover, is an expansive, sexual, highly charged and even perverse collection,
collecting five incredible sections: “LEAVES,” “SAVE THE WORLD,” “WHEN I LOOKED
AT YOUR COCK MY IMAGINATION DIED,” “MERCURY” and “O.” There is something about
Reines’ new collection I haven’t seen in serious poetry before, that level of
personal, physical and sexual openness, and the text rocks with a physical
urgency that propels the poem forward. Her second section, “SAVE THE WORLD,” is
composed as an essay/rant against the film The
Watchmen (2009), and its conflation of sex and violence, as she writes:
This
movie is about evil
What
its woman wants
Is
love and respect
She
does not care that the world is ending
And
that the superhuman man is trying to save the evil world
For
humanitarian reasons. He is not paying attention to her.
She
wants love
And
respect.
She
wants his thoughts.
Jubilee Hitchhiker: the life and times of
Richard Brautigan, William
Hjortsberg: After years of rumours, William Hjortsberg’s incredibly
detailed biography of the late American writer Richard Brautigan was released a
few years back, the 852 page Jubilee Hitchhiker: the life and times of Richard Brautigan (Berkeley CA:
Counterpoint, 2012). And, after three long months, I have finally finished
reading it. In Hjortsberg’s biography, the detail is absolutely incredible. In
working up to talking about Brautigan’s association with the hippie period of
Haight-Ashbury, a whole chapter is dedicated to providing a backdrop, with the
same treatment given to the earlier period of the Berkeley Renaissance. Brautigan
managed to become a leading figure in American writing [see a recent piece I wrote on his work here], called “the last of the
Beat poets,” connecting the beat writers to further literary and cultural
movements, including the Diggers and Hippies (he was part of the former, but
less the latter). One of the most striking, and thoroughly-researched,
biographies I’ve read, this is a fantastic biography of an American writer
often dismissed by serious readers unable to read past the surface elements of
his ‘hippie-surrealism,’ misunderstanding the depth of his work, and the place
he should hold as one of the most original American writers of the second half
of the twentieth century.
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