Cracked
If we’re cracked open,
it’s only because
something wants out.
—Anne Simpson, “Winter”
Imagine her in 1916, a
child in a tanned
hide jacket with
three-quarter-length sleeves,
brass and plastic
buttons, fringes
and glass beads. There are
no pictures.
She always effaced
herself
in photos, one hand
shielding her eyes,
wavering at the edge of family.
If we’re cracked open
all the stories spill
out. But there are no stories,
only a four-year-old girl
and her little buddy
in the years of the Great
War.
She reappears in 1935,
now wife and mother, all
stories silenced.
She was never quite
there.
Cracked, the roles rubbed
thin—
because something wants
out.
Edmonton
writer Kat Cameron’s second poetry collection and third published book is Ghosts Still Linger (Edmonton AB: University of Alberta Press, 2020), following on
the heels of her debut poetry title, Strange Labyrinth (Oolichan Books,
2015) and short story collection The Eater of Dreams (Thistledown Press,
2019). There is something in Cameron’s collection comparable to Calgary poet Emily Ursuliak’s own full-length debut, Throwing the Diamond Hitch
(Calgary AB: University of Calgary Press, 2017), [see my review of such here]
in the shared historical depiction of prairie women; whereas, admittedly, the women
being written about in Ursuliak’s collection were very specific. Whether the
women in Ghosts Still Linger are based on actual people does fall into
speculation. Either way, Cameron does articulate a sense of how these women
were held to the expectations of the times in which they existed, versus
Ursuliak’s depiction of two women very much refusing those same set of expectations.
“I will drive up the Old North Trail,” Cameron writes, as part of the poem “Old
North Trail,” “the same trail my great-great-grandparents / followed in 1891—that
spring // the Red Deer River flooded, the men / missed the ford and foundered,
a horse drowned, / and a loaded wagon floated downstream // with a young man
clinging to his possessions.”
From
prairie history to cultural considerations such as the Edmonton Oilers and
Alberta bumper stickers, Cameron’s poems examine what occurs when life gets
caught up against external forces, attempting to articulate the ghosts of what
has been lost, and what may have been set aside, writing out a confluence of
women from Alberta to Wyoming, through boom and bust, through hope and loss and
sadness and grief. These are characters that fight to remain standing,
something that, at times, is either all or more than they are capable of. In three
sections of short lyrics—“Ghosts are Ordinary,” “Alberta Advantage” and “Lightning
over Wyoming”—Cameron composes her lyric narratives as short scene-sketches, writing
out a particular moment or sequence of moments in the lives of the woman or
women she is attempting to capture. Her articulation of the boom and bust, the “pissing
it away” of Alberta wealth is rife throughout the collection as well, such as
the poem “Rollerblades,” speaking of urban scavengers, a poem that ends:
Urban magpies pick up
debris
like mudlarks on the
banks of the Thames
who scavenged for scraps
of coal and copper
in the raw sewage of the
river.
The
third section explores some of the characters of the semi-mythological west,
writing out William “Buffalo Bill” Cody, Louisa Maude Frederici Cody, Louisa
Cody Garlow and Annie Oakley Butler on the endurance and calculation of independent
prairie women, on what they had to endure or choose to cultivate their
freedoms. To end the poem “Little Sure Shot,” on Annie Oakley Buckley, she
writes: “Would the act have worked / if she hadn’t skipped into the arena /
blowing kisses, if she hadn’t done / that cute little kick at the end of each show?
// An image cultivated as carefully / as a homesteader’s garden.” While certain
of the individual poems in the collection might not be as strong, they work in
unison, in collage, as a single, book-length unit. Some poems are longer
stretches of narrative, while others are moments, each working their way
towards a collective arrangement of loss, grief and ghosts.
Paper Chambers
She cries so easily now,
over her dead sisters, how she is a burden.
When I was young, she would
collage Valentine poems onto paper hearts. Now
her hand trembles, curls
into a claw. She can’t write her name on birthday cards,
that smooth cursive. She says,
“I can’t make my body work,” and her words
rip my heart’s paper
chambers.
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