what this town needs is horse statues. more horse
statues. another horse statue. a bigger horse statue. we gotta get more monster
horses. move out the renters. this baby’s priced. this baby’s priced to move.
what this town needs:
horsewomen
stay at homes. more horsewomen stay-at-homes.
another
horsewoman stay-at-home. a
bigger
horsewoman stay-at-home. we
gotta
get more monument homesteads.
move
out the renters. this backbencher’s priced. this
backbencher’s
priced to move. (“A ROSE IS A ROSE IS
A ROSE MANHATTAN”)
Calgary poet Nikki Reimer’s third full-length collection is My Heart Is a Rose Manhattan (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2019),
following [sic] (Calgary AB:
Frontenac House, 2010) [see my review of such here] and DOWNVERSE (Talonbooks, 2014) [see my review of such here] and
chapbooks fist things first (Windsor
ON: Wrinkle Press, 2009) and that stays news (Vancouver BC: Nomados Literary Publishers, 2011). Much in the way of
her previous collection, My Heart Is a
Rose Manhattan is a book of absurdities and responses, whether to Alberta
politics, the ongoing housing crises, capitalism, the patriarchy, poverty and literary
politics, or social media, exhaustion, rage, bewilderment and grief. As she
writes to open the poem “Dear Craigslist,”: “Knock it the fuck off with your
stale tributaries, your overdrawn affluenza [.]” In an interview I conduced with her for Jacket2 in 2015, she responded:
My compositional process first and foremost is
an attempt to process a bewildering array of “content,” and second, it attempts
to uncover value systems that are embedded in discourse. As writer I am seeking
some kind of catharsis, or impossible resolution.
Grief,
in personal and political ways, is the foundation upon which this book sits,
running the length and breadth of the collection. Both poems and author openly
grieve, and work to explore that grief, and the implications such an ongoing
grief will have upon the body, the family and culture: “i might suggest that
grief has made my family embarrassing and ridiculous / but we were always
already embarrassing and ridiculous / grief has metastasized our individual
personality flaws and our family-culture flaws / my family is a cancer cancer is the normcoriest of diseases /
because it’s been pinkified and commodified” (“Our sorrow is normative”). In language
twists and turns, Reimer’s poems rage and kick, concurrently firing back,
standing firm and admitting defeat. Her poems alternate between lyric, collage
and pointilism, narrating a series of sweeping attempts to figure out exactly what
the hell is going on, and, even, how to stop it. As the poem “Kenya’s greatest
elephant” begins: “Dandelions are delicious? / Peter MacKay explains lack of a
special guest appearance. // Last photo was a teenager I appreciate our
elephants. / You are the platform.” These poems kick the world bloody, and the
world more than deserves it. As a fragment of the longer sequence “Our sorrow
is normative” reads:
once, in Toronto in my twenties, i read a
menstrual poem
the fifty-something dude who’d been flirting
with me said
“men don’t like to hear” such topics
he was the husband of the sister of the man who
used to helm English CBC
(a man whose Prada coat I’d hung in the Regional
Director’s office
on more than one occasion)
he probably did not go into debt for his fancy shoes
i played exaggerated-dumb-uptalk bitch
“They
don’t like to hear about cats?”
because
fuck him
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