THROUGH
GOLDEN AGES GIRLS LODGE TOGETHER
Through golden ages girls lodge together;
Through
generations girls encourage laughs.
Naughty young Georgian urges gals gather,
Mingle,
gossip, manage long paragraphs;
Gentle Norwegian daughter neglects thought,
Gleefully
living during teasing rough;
Rigid governess begrudges getting caught
Gambling,
feigns dignity acting tough;
Fragile ragazza
migrant indulges strange
Magic,
reigns vigorously being strong,
Geriatric group ignores bogus change,
Sings unforgettably
nostalgic song:
Thoroughly grateful partygoers forgo
Giving big gifts, betraying largest ego.
Cranbrook, British Columbia poet nathan dueck’s third full-length poetry collection, after
the collections king's(mère)
(Turnstone Press, 2004) and he’ll
(Pedlar Press, 2014) [see my review of such here], is the wonderfully playful A Very Special Episode (Hamilton ON: Wolsak and Wynn, 2019),
furthering a shift in content that has been developing for some time into
nostalgia and popular culture (see also: his 2013 chapbook @BillMurrayinPurgatorio from above/ground press). As part of his 2014 Touch the Donkey interview, he
spoke of the project, then still a work-in-progress with a very different title:
My work-in-progress is tentatively titled
“CRTC.” (I'm not sure that I’ll get away with that title.) I’m writing a series
of poetic forms and modes about pop culture, but culture that isn’t really
“popular” anymore. These are old-timey poems about cartoons, comic books,
magazines, video games that have become the white noise of my mind. As I age
out of the 18-35 demo, I’m becoming nostalgic for the late ‘80s / early ‘90s
static – I can no longer ignore the culture that informed the lifestyle of this
slovenly “indoorsman.”
You’re right to point out that I tend toward
writing book-length projects. Previously, I’ve written with one eye on the book
as a unit of composition, but I’m trying to stop. I’d like to think of “CRTC”
as more of a “greatest hits” package, which means I’m focusing on each poem as
part of a collection. Who knows, it may turn out to be a book that readers
tirelessly flip through like channels during commercial breaks.
There
is something quite refreshing in how this work joyfully acknowledges how deeply
immersed in television and pop culture some of us are and have been, a tension
I’ve also been aware of over the years as a literary writer (my own immersion
in comic book culture is some 10,000 titles deep); as though somehow those of
us who are literary aren’t allowed to be engaged in what is so often deemed “low
culture” (pop culture, comic books, wrestling, etcetera). The collection is
both confusing and wonderfully produced, designed to mimic the classic TV
Guide, and dueck engages with numerous, familiar tropes, from the title itself
to references that might not be so obvious, unless you are of a certain age,
such as the poem “HEARING THE WEEKLY SECRET LETS ME SCREAM,” for example, that
refers to a regular feature of the Saturday morning show Pee-Wee’s Playhouse (1986-1991). The blend of pop culture and tight
lyrics composed in formal structures are reminiscent of the sonnets of Montreal
poet David McGimpsey, but there is something far more absurd in what dueck is
doing, allowing, in a certain way, for the ridiculousness of composing poems on
the sitcom Golden Girls, or Knight Rider, You Can’t Do That on Television and Droids. This book refuses to take itself too seriously, yet manage
lines so taut and vibrant one could bounce a quarter off of any of them, such
as the poem “A HOOT,” that begins:
It is
day in the neighbourhood is a beautiful day for a neighbor is a neighbourly day
in this beauty wood. But Mr. Rogers felt alone. He felt tight as a buckled belt
and tied tie.
But could
you be what you seem, could you be a bellow could you be howl could you be horn
or could you be a stage whisper could you be a steam whistle could it be beak,
beak from the sky oh my you are a hoot, a hoot when a neighbor. But you escaped
from an eggshell in a nest but you were only make-believe to Mr. Rogers but you
were as lonely as one could be for you were once in an eggshell for no one
knows loneliness as an owl alone in an eggshell but you were only make-believe
for you made feathers blue not grey you made eyes white not grey so Mr. Rogers
eased through sleeves of his cardigan.
So he
started to croon.
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