EARWORM
I met him in an airport last June. He was
reading new poems by W.S. Merwin. In hardcover. A rare species! He’d been Lou
Reed’s keyboard player, among other things, and said good poems helped him
write songs. We talked until they called his flight, and the conversation left
me giddy in the way travel should, but mostly doesn’t, now that we move about
with our wires drooping. We stayed in touch. I read an article about him,
learned he’d survived leukemia after a bone marrow transplant. In December he
released a new solo album, which I downloaded and burned to a CD. It’s been
kicking around the house for a while. I keep meaning to take it out to the car,
listen to the whole thing on longer drives. Yesterday he posted that all his
dates are cancelled for the foreseeable future. He’s in his 40s. The title
track’s an earworm. When leukemia killed my daughter’s friend at sixteen, I wasn’t
much help, called it unfair and she
agreed, cried into my neck. He was beautiful, and open as the day.
There
is something incredibly compelling about Canadian expat Julie Bruck’s new
poetry collection, How to Avoid Huge Ships (London ON: Brick Books, 2018), something that keeps drawing me in
and holding my attention. While I’m not normally attracted to this particular
strain of narrative lyric, her lines are magnetic. Her poems evoke and evade,
deceptively set as small stories or small scenes, but weaving in observation,
surprise and deep meditation. Her poems have both an ease and a density, and a
physicality to them, as she writes to open the poem “THE COLD”: “Despite seven—no,
eight—months / of steroid sprays, antibiotics, antibacterials, / and whatever
else modern medicine has / flung at it, the cold that finally killed my father
/ lives on in me.”
How to Avoid Huge Ships is Bruck’s fourth
full-length title, after The Woman Downstairs (1993), The End of Travel
(1999) and the Governor General’s Award-winning Monkey Ranch (2012), all of which have been produced by Brick
Books. These are poems that evoke both loss and grief while allowing for a kind
of zen appreciation of her subjects, writing out grief even as her narrator(s)
learn to allow that same grief to pass through the body. Moments, as John
Newlove wrote, not monuments.
HOW TO
AVOID HUGE SHIPS
In lieu of faith, there were books.
As my mother kept dying, I looked
things up, assembling a glossary
of hopeless causes, which occasioned
frequent walks to and from the branch
library. On the last day of January, I was
returning The
Trauma of Everyday Life,
planning to borrow Orphaned Adults,
when I passed a brightly tattooed
young woman reading on her stoop.
I needed a sign, and she was deep
in The
Dead Do Not Improve, so I
jettisoned my list of self-help titles,
those my father called guides
for the insane, and checked out
How to Avoid Huge Ships instead.
In Captain Trimmer’s most fervent
desire that this book
serve as guide
and best friend when
you find yourself
in a tight situation
with a large ship,
I found some solace. Such lumbering
vessels, he remarks, are slow to turn.
They can be very difficult to stop.
This has nothing to do with Ms Bruck's poetry, which I liked -- but some time ago, I stumbled across another "How To Avoid Huge Ships", this one published in 1994 by Cornell Maritime Press (ISBN 10: 0870334336 ISBN 13: 9780870334337), written by a Captain John W. Trimmer, covering in .
ReplyDeleteThe idea of a book about avoiding huge ships seemed... well, weird. I mean, they're huge; you avoid them. Apparently, it's not that simple, which means other assumptions about daily life may also be incorrect.