step crisply out with
your message
sideways eyes
say you’re likely
pissing blood again
despite that defiled
organ
carried
away like
an air balloon
(likely)
(again)
I think in muted tones
of bending
clenching
gleaning for a meal
what was shed here
Winnipeg poet Lori Cayer’s fifth full-length poetry collection, after Stealing Mercury (The Muses’ Company, 20040, Attenuations of Force (Frontenac House, 2010), Dopamine Blunder (Tightrope Books, 2016) and Mrs Romanov (The Porcupine’s quill, 2017) is the book-length poem Searching for Signal (Winnipeg MB: Signature Editions, 2021). Composed as a long poem that reveals itself through a sequence of accumulative, self-contained lyric fragments, there are some curious structural echoes in Searching for Signal with some of those first Winnipeg poetry titles I discovered throughout the 1990s and into the early 2000s: titles by Rob Budde, Dennis Cooley [see my review of his latest three here], Sarah Gordon, Kristen Wittman and Todd Bruce (all produced, interestingly enough, through Turnstone Press; and it is hard to specifically know if this type of writing is something Turnstone has evolved away from, or is simply not utilized in the same way, but for poets such as Cooley). The echoes are those of pacing, rhythm and structure, leaning into what Saskatchewan poet Andrew Suknaski self-described as his “loping, coyote lines,” allowing the breath and the break on the page to articulate cadence.
this is the bent
branch indicating our
direction
abandoned winter
nest
brought to your sudden bedside
so
we might replace
your presence
on the trail
Cayer’s Searching for Signal is composed as an elegy for her father, writing sketches on and around him, as well as the implications of their settler-space. She writes of and for a father, through his old age and across his long life, writing against his drifts and into a kind of clarity. As each page begins a particular thought, memory or sketch, there is an echo here, also, of Georges Perec’s classic I Remember, something George Bowering picked up on as well, through his memoir The Moustache: Memories of Greg Curnoe (Toronto ON: Coach House Press, 1993). Cayer writes to remember her father before memory is all she is left with. Addressing reminiscences and some difficult paths, she writes the loveliest of lyric threads, from his failing health and the inevitabilities to come. Cayer writes her father through a sequence of short lyric bursts that don’t connect in any particular narrative order, but offer short scenes, ideas and memories, collaging together into a portrait not only of him, but of their relationship. “I am replacing you / in my own words,” she writes, mid-way through the collection, “the feeling is / gravel / shredding dermis / no bike / my list of topics incomplete [.]” This is a striking collection, one propelled by a strong sense of lyric and rhythm, and the possibility of a story that unfolds as memory does, in short bursts and out of sequence. There is much here to admire. And then, of course, the final page, that reads:
the sky
should have
but didn’t
fall in after you
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