Friday, January 16, 2026

Ongoing notes: mid-January, 2026: Julia Drescher, Sarah Anne Wallen + Michael Goodfellow,

Yesterday was a snow day over this way. Were you somewhere warm and safe, hopefully reading a copy of my Snow day (Spuyten Duyvil, 2025)? I mean, this is the right time for such. 

We’re kicking off our VERSeFest spring season (leading up to our festival in March) with our Volunteer Recruitment and Appreciation event very soon! Sunday, February 1, 3-5pm at Cooper’s Creative Kitchen (main floor of the Embassy Ottawa hotel at Cooper and Cartier, one block east of Elgin), featuring performances by Myriam Legault-Beauregard, Daniel Groleau Landry, Margo LaPierre and natalie hanna. Might we see you?

Garner NC: I’m always pleased to see new work by Julia Drescher, and her latest is the small chapbook-sequence Notes on Film (Further Other Book Works, 2025). I’ve published three chapbooks by her to-date through above/ground press, and I’m always eager to see more. I’m admittedly surprised she only has one full-length collection to date—Open Epic (Fort Collins CO: Delete Press, 2017) [see my review of such here]—given how much work she seems to have worth compiling (although this is a frustration I have with a few other poets as well, including Jessica Smith and Amish Trivedi—these writers are clearly brilliant, why aren’t they getting published more often?). I’m intrigued by Drescher’s endlessly long lines, the way she continues a thought-line, layering movement upon movement. There’s a flow akin to a meandering across this essay-stretch of lyric, writing the ebbs and flows of notes on film and whatever else might slip into her view. “everyone’s middle of wood wound tight around a whistle / & eviction notices.” she writes, mid-way through the sequence. “there’s the edge of something & then there’s water / I feel in you in, you said, like atmospheric variations then / it’s the hardest way, how people enter a room.”

at noon, someone is standing, at noon wide open. there is a feral friend & daunting
wood—flocks of leaves, a copse of birds & unbearable lighting, there is whimsy
& then there is harm. the film gets started after the crowd departs, after the figs & the contact improv,
the ghosts of fallen grasses, drowning.
you said, country is monstrous art is merciless, thus
there’s an ear to do, imperfect. we build boats of rocks & then we burn them. you are walking in a film
& then you are eaten. I said, this is a test, a squandered passage & you said not knowing
where any thing is, we move from building
to building & I said what

Brooklyn NY: I’m intrigued by what appears to be the chapbook debut by Brooklyn poet and bookseller Sarah Anne Wallen, the chapbook Same Day (ugly duckling presse, 2025). Assembled as short poems and extended stretches of lyric, many of which feel variations upon the New York School aesthetic of first-person movement—the poem “DAYS OF THE WEEK,” for example, is dedicated “for Lewis Warsh,” and includes:

Monday the sun comes in hot through the window
Tuesday the heat is off and I can see my breath inside
Wednesday my toes never warm up
Thursday the line for the grocery store goes out the door
          and around the block
Friday I leave work feeling nothing at all
Saturday I think about love letters
Sunday I write a poem about wanting to write a love letter
Monday I do not write

There’s such propulsion to these lines. As the extended sequence “ISSUE OF PULP” begins: “today I feel / like the clouds / deflated / last night / I made / a phone call / dreamed / I had sex / in a laundromat / against the / dryers / warm / when I cry / I go out / on the balcony / press the back / of my hand / against / my forehead / there are other / people / down there / it’s easy / to feel / lonely […]” These poems are smart, wry and observational, sharp and quietly witty. The use of different rhythms is interesting across these pieces, from the staggered layering of lines to the extended stretch, one step against another, offering declaration and observation twirled and parried in delightful patterns. I think I need to see further poems by Sarah Anne Wallen.

WHY 

did the girl
fall off the swing? 

because
she was born 

 

when you’re a dog
your mouth
is your hand 

today in therapy
I talked about birds

Kentville/Lunenburg County NS: One of the final titles by the recently-outgoing iteration of Gaspereau Press (currently in flux as the new publisher sets himself up) is Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia poet Michael Goodfellow’s chapbook Cleft (Gaspereau Press, 2025), a title that follows his full-length collections Naturalism, An Annotated Bibliography: Poems (Gaspereau Press, 2022) [see my review of such here] and Folklore of Lunenburg County (Gaspereau Press, 2024) [see my review of such here]. Set as a curious sequence of short bursts, the poem holds as kind of call-and-response between two works, interwoven, with one poem furthering on each left page, and the other poem furthering on the right. As the note that opens the collection offers: “The collection contains two interwoven poems. The poem ‘Snakemouth Orchid’ first appeared in Literary Review of Canada (July, 2022) and will also appear in Cape Cod to Nova Scotia: Art, Ecology, Poetry of the Gulf of Maine (Hachette, 2027).” And yet, why offer the title for one but not the other? Presumably “Cleft” sits as an umbrella-title, providing name to the combination between these two pieces, and not, say, an extension composed around the poem “Snakemouth Orchid.” If these are two poems, composed (seemingly) independently of each other, and interwoven here for the sake of a new, third piece, why not include? As the first page reads:

mallow, flower of borders
and western light, where
breeze caught the house’s corners
moonflower, his hands
against your other night, hard
windows double paned
the sky was river bottom, curved
where silt had gathered
wind, none of this could be stopped

Goodfellow’s work is known for a lyric attention to landscape, to his natural environment, crafting sharp first-person meditations around the understanding that humans are part of, and not separate from, the natural world, and these pieces, this piece, continues that exploration. It is interesting to see him working to shift the context between these two poems, interplaying the narrative, the lyric, and the italicized sections, presumably all part of the same “other” poem, offer themselves as curious asides to the main (so called) unitalicized narrative line. Less, almost, a call-and-response, perhaps, than the italicized lines as asides. Either way, the experiment is an interesting one. As the second page reads:

orchid, sky propped,
snakemouthed, July bright 

and star dark
it penciled the sky

 

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