DIVORCE
When mother divorces him, father moves out,
onto the roof. He takes only the record player & his copy of the 1938 radio
play, War of the Worlds. Every night at midnight, the Martians land & kill
everybody. He comes down eventually, & mother lets him back inside. He still
plays the record though, & sometimes says with fearful eyes: Whenever they
take something, their world gets bigger & ours gets smaller.
I’ve
been an admirer of the work of Oregon poet Jon Boisvert for some time now, so
am immensely gratified to finally have a copy of his first full-length
collection, BORN (Portland OR: Airlie
Press, 2017). As Karen Holmberg writes on the back cover: “Like a Mobius band, BORN is a fluid continuum, an extended
poem in which the speaker circles back to his childhood loss of his father,
then toward, into, and through the loss of his own newborn son.” Writing through,
of and around multiple and even incremental losses, Boisvert’s prose poems
exist as small, semi-surreal snapshots, capturing a single, small moment and
highlighting its component parts; sometimes the effect is one of tone, or
texture, or even of relaying and absorbing a particular piece of information. As
much as the poems are stand-alone, they accumulate in their own way into a
sequence, suggesting a linearity that shimmers, shifts and occasionally floats
across a span of years (and even lifetimes). While there is a sadness and grief
that permeates every poem in this collection, the collection is both
heartbreaking, and somehow not overwhelmed by that same sadness; the poems
exhibit an odd matter-of-factness to them, a storytelling aura that exists in a
lyric haze of stunning subtlety and force. Structurally, there are echoes here
of the prose poems of American poet Jennifer Kronovet, if it were merged with
the overall wisdom and darker tone of Bill Callahan’s songs. These are poems to
be absorbed, not merely read.
MUSIC
I buried my true love one afternoon. I made a
mandolin out of her hair & bones & gave it to her mother, who had lost
two other daughters, a banjo & a double-bass. We don’t talk anymore, but
sometimes I can hear her singing. I hear them playing simple music through the
pines, through the pines, through the pines.
No comments:
Post a Comment