Alabama-based poet and editor Jessica Smith’s third full-length collection is How to Know the Flowers (El Paso TX:
Veliz Books, 2019), a book, as the author writes in her “FOREWORD,”
[…] about trauma, sexual harassment, female
friendship, grief, place, and techniques of natural dyeing. Organized in three
sections, it develops from a question of “what happened?” through memory,
processing, and resolution.
Because the act of
recollecting occurs in time, it moves linearly, successively, as it marks time
(simultaneity). But our memories do not conform to linear narratives. When I
recall a birthday party from my youth, I can recall fragmentary colors,
patterns, and little snippets of linear moments (she brought out the cake, he
paid for the ice cream), but to pull together a story from those elements
distorts the reality of my memory. To narrate the memory is to fill in the
gaps. In writing fragmented narratives that do not necessarily move linearly
across and down the page, I hope to preserve some of the sense that memories
are shimmery, unreliable, scattered things.
How to Know the Flowers is structured as a
sequence of page-length individual poems that scatter and staccato across the
page. With poems dated from “9 March 2017” to “8 July 2017,” How to Know the Flowers extends her
ongoing project, The Daybooks; a
project that so far includes numerous chapbooks as well as her two previous
full-length poetry titles: Organic Furniture Cellar (Outside Voices, 2006) [see my review of such here] and Life-List (Chax Press, 2015) [see my review of such here]. “like a storm brewing,” she writes, to open “16 March
2017,” “but with no clouds gathering [.]”
Smith’s
structures of erasure and excision explore and respond to violence as a way to
cut away the dross and focus, properly, on her subject matter, writing the gaps
through the gaps; writing the buried strains and threads, continuing those
structures throughout the collection as a way to finally rebuild out of and
beyond that violence into something constructive and positive. The poems pull
apart as a way to articulate, comprehend and, finally, reset. “days of
reckoning,” she writes, to open “3 July 2017,” “with acceptance what has
been lost / my grip loosens what
remains what grew / the emotional
memories become pure fact / lose their impact [.]”
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