What is G must be greater than my desire to
bury G while securing in earth to witness growth. If precision is what I aspire
to, then I must let G drop down from the alphabet and be here. Rows of seeds
and seeds cupped in our hands. G is a garden and seems simple.
New Jersey writer and artist Emmalea Russo’s debut full-length poetry title, after
the appearance of a chapbook through Dancing Girl Press, is G (Futurepoem, 2018), a book that
already mentions a second title forthcoming in 2019, Wave Archive, with Book*hug. The first and largest part of the
collection, simply titled “ONE,” is a sequence of sixty-four paired poems,
writing almost a self-call and response, as the two poems twirl around each
other akin to parts of a molecule. The piece above, for example, is the second
of the opening pair, a duo that begins with a squared poem that reads: “Cultivate
one two three: / Row makes simple / I engenders I enters and / I Greet Greets
on Gar / Dens G o Grammars G of a / Group of Growths as: / Eventually even I Grow
/ East seeping into a G he [.]” The second section of the collection, held at
the end, exists in more traditional (at least in comparison) prose, and opens:
I don’t write. I sweat in the garden and pull
weeds, trample, hold up tomatoes.
G and I plan to make a garden and use what we’ve
made. We begin by deciding which part of the yard will be ours. Seems simple.
A plan. Plant.
I can’t know what G is feeling and so the
reverse also must be true.
There is a sensation in my mind of a zooming in
and out. Wonderland-like. I discover the word qualia. I experience green differently from G. Our differing
experiences of headache, summer, the process of enclosing a feeling within an
object or idea. The connections, not the connected. Are G and I connected? If yes,
by what and for how long?
We garden in the back of the house near the abandoned
railroad tracks. We ruin overgrowth. We make ourselves at ease inside the word we.
G is a poem writing in
and out of a paired subject matter: the composition and maintaining of a
garden, and the composition and maintaining of a relationship, even as both are
nurtured, mature, break down and even fall entirely apart. There are elements
to the book that read like an instruction manual or meditation on gardening (Ottawa poet Monty Reid’s 2016 Chaudiere title, the lyric meditation Garden, also comes to mind), while other
times the G shifts to refer to the narrator’s partner, and the poem
incorporates the movement of a relationship; there are times that the book
moves through language itself, broken down like soil, or even into theory,
wonderfully managing to be all of the above, while maintaining the integrity of
what is constructed to exist as a book-length poem out of a variety of elements.
This book is fascinating, both in how it is constructed and how it flows, from
beginning to end, and I’m curious to see just how her Book*hug title is shaped.
As Ariel Yelen writes to introduce an interview with the author at BOMB magazine (posted February 1, 2019):
“Emmalea Russo’s G (Futurepoem) is a
book about construction and destruction—a garden and a relationship zoom in and
out of focus while language is moved around and often out of the way
completely.” As part of that interview, Russo responds:
It was a long, strange process. I started in
2012 and the form was very different. I wanted to write about making a garden,
being in a relationship, and the creation and destruction that comes with those
endeavors. The relationship in G is
the electrical current that moves the text while the books and art I was
thinking about at the time—Carol Bove, Alfred North Whitehead, Kundalini yoga,
panpsychism—also come into the work. I wanted to transmit energy and the words
were almost getting in the way.
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