DEODORANTS
GROW BORED OF THEIR SMELL
they breathe it in and can’t think of anything
else
an Unscented one takes on a metallic scent
they overwhelm themselves and want to run out
but last forever and slowly lose their minds
Northampton MA writer Rachel B. Glaser’s fourth book (and second poetry collection) is HAIRDO (The Song Cave, 2017), the oddest
combination of surreal and straightforward lyric, composing a series of
first-person explorations of self and the world. These are poems meant to be
heard. Reflecting an occasionally dark and risqué humour, poems such as
“TEENAGE GIRLS HOT FOR THE EIFFEL TOWER,” “THOSE WOMAN WOMAN MAN THREESOMES IN
PORN” and “WHILE I WAS A TREMENDOUS TEENAGER, YOU WERE STILL READING THE
UNAUTHORIZED BIOGRAPHY OF BOWSER” are composed through a bravado that shows the
narrator as a force to be reckoned with. Neither easy, straightforward or safe,
Glaser’s poems are forceful, insistent and wonderfully confident, unflinching
even in her self-assessments or self-criticisms, and might just require to be
read aloud, for the sake of understanding what it is she is doing, especially
through poems that might appear to be writing out juvenile narratives of girls
who love their guitar teachers, movies, parties and other essential ephemerae
of youth. The end of the poem “WHILE I WAS A TREMENDOUS…” reads:
I couldn’t be bothered to read my fan mail
you were choosing a middle name for your rabbit
you were digesting yesterday’s strudel
pretending tic-tacs were illegal
putting your ear to a puddle
that’s why it’s hard for me to relate to you
now
because I have a night club named after me
and you are still looking for your Lego’s head
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