tree
intimate
propername
outer
transit
household
stir
shadow line
duskedroom
heron
glows
dusk
downed
bat
ominous moundpath
(“: nightstand rubberplant :”)
Self-described
in the acknowledgements as a “linguistic queering of intimacies,” Tucson, Arizona poet Kimberly Alidio’s latest poetry title is : once teeth bones coral :
(Brooklyn NY: Belladonna*, 2020). : once teeth bones coral : is her second
full-length poetry title, after after projects the resound (Black Radish
Press, 2016), she also has a further title out later this year: why letter ellipses (selva oscura press, 2020). I’m curious about this idea of “linguistic
queering of intimacies,” an idea she expands a bit upon as part of her recent “12 or 20 questions” interview: “I have a tongue-in-cheek aim to reclaim Language
Poetry, generally held to be antithetical to the expressive, subjective, and
even experimental poetics of BIPOC/ LGBTQIA+ writers, for a poetics of
queer-of-color, postcolonial, cross-lingual synesthesia.” Structured in seven poem-sections—“:
rock neverended :,” “: nightstand rubberplant :,” “: pours pore :,” “: okra oat
egg :,” “: wave reverse :,” “: continent reverence :” and “: hand axiom:”—the lyric
cycle, or lyric suite, of : once teeth bones coral : is an expansive,
fractured, fragmented, open lyric, comparable in structure to what Toronto poet Margaret Christakos worked in her recent suite charger (Talonbooks,
2020) [see my review of such here].
Alidio’s
lyric cycle works as both sequence and accumulation of single points, stretched
across the grid of the square page, directing connections of how words can’t
help but mean, and how those meanings interact. She writes of landscape across a
wide field, and scope via a sequence of threads. The colons she plays with in
both book title and individual poem/section titles suggest an
interconnectedness, how one piece fits easily and directly into the next. This is
a singular, expansive poem across a wide field: one simply has to step back far
enough to be able to see the whole piece at once. As she writes to open the “:
notes :” at the end of the collection:
As an effort to undo in
language the normative relations of self to lover, landscape, and loss, this
book opens with a poem that arranges language from Lorine Niedecker’s journal, “Lake
Superior Country ’66,” published in Lake Superior (Wave, 2013). “The
journey of the rock is never ended. In every tiny part of any living thing are
materials that once were rock that turned to soil. These materials are drawn
out of the soil by plant roots and the plant used them to build leaves, stems,
flowers and fruits. Plants are eaten by animals. In our blood is iron from
plants that draw it out of the soil. Your teeth and bones were once coral.”
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