I stand before a wall. This wall extends
infinitely in either direction and is of course located outside.
A wall that used to be one-foot wide. Is now
razor-thin. So thin I can see through it. But not, for reason of its thinness,
weaker. May even be stronger.
The desire to pass through the wall.
To the other side. (“THE WALL”)
I’m
fascinated by the poems in Helen Dimos’ first full-length collection, No Realtor Was Compensated For This Sale
(The Elephants, Ltd., 2017), a collection gathered, it would seem, as much as
constructed. Built in five sections—“THE WALL,” “DEAR NOBODY,” “POEMS,”
“LANGUAGE OF THE PORES” and “DEAR NOBODY”—the poems in No Realtor Was Compensated For This Sale allow for the sketched-out
line—the fragment, the shift and the expansive canvas—creating a book-length
work of remarkable nuance and strength, attempting the minutiae of language and
the world as part of far larger questions. In sections that shift structurally
from a long poem constructed from stanza-fragments and clear statements, a
suite of ekphrasic pieces, a collection of lyrics and a short script of scenes,
Dimos’ poems feel both restless and incredibly clear, relentless and flawlessly
casual, writing and writhing deep into the heart of just about everything. As
she writes to open the fourth section: “Is it the language of the pores that
can take the shape of molecules?”
Dear nobody
I go to dinner with a writer in Athens. We talk
about literature. We talk about politics. We talk about literature. We talk
about Greek politics but I’m not sure it matters. ‘It’s more rewarding to talk
about literature’ he says as I propped up my face with my hand? While talking
of Tsipras. —Maybe more rewarding which isn’t the right word anyway but
speaking of literature the world opens acquires endlessness while talk of
politics clicks the world shut not the shut-ness of closure but dead-shut,
despair
This is totally and completely wrong
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