January 16th, 2011

Link • Audio, Poems, Tributes 7 Comments

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Rick Lupert

RULES FOR POETRY

Never use adjectives
unless you’re trying to describe something
and you don’t want to do it the hard way.

Never use the word “forever.”
It reminds people they’re going to die
and the last thing you need is people distracted
by their mortality during your poem.

Write what you know
unless you’re a fool, in which case
look to the internet, and write about something there.

Avoid vowels
and their angry sister
the letter Y.

Avoid cliché.
On the other hand…

Learn the difference between
epigraphs,
epigrams and
episiotomies.

Use as few words as possible.
In fact, hand out blank sheets of paper
and tell people it’s your finest work.

If you ever use the phrase “darkness in my soul”
be prepared for me to come to your house
and kill you.

If you’re going to write in form, do it right.
For example, as I understand it, a haiku
is eight hundred words written while
sitting on a cheesecake.

Line breaks are important,
but use them carefully. Once you’ve broken a line
its parents will never forgive you.

Finally, go to poetry workshops.
Sometimes they serve food and
you can’t write poetry if you’re dead
because you forgot to eat.

from Rattle #33, Summer 2010
Tribute to Humor

January 15th, 2011

Link • E-Reviews 1 Comment

Review by Bill NeumireThe Wonderfull Yeare by Nate Pritts

THE WONDERFULL YEARE
by Nate Pritts

Cooper Dillon Books
San Diego, CA
ISBN 9780984192823
2010, 74 pp., $14.00
www.cooperdillon.com

Recently, I checked out the new press, Cooper Dillon Books, and, after some perusal, I purchased Nate Pritts’ third collection, The Wonderfull Yeare. Why did I choose this title? Well, I found out that Pritts lives in Syracuse just as I do, though we’ve never met. Next, I found out that he graduated from SUNY Brockport, my alma mater. Too much of a coincidence for me to set aside. Pritts even thanks several former professors of mine in his acknowledgements: Ralph Black, Judith Kitchen, and Stan Rubin (the latter two moved to Washington state and started the Rainier Writing Workshop MFA program).

Once I received the book and cracked it open, I read the epigraph from Thomas Dekker. Dekker’s original pamphlet, The Wonderfull Yeare, was a multi-genre account of the events of the plague year 1603 in which the word “wonderful” was meant to mean astonishing, not good. Meanwhile, Pritts’ book, a calendar of sorts, is composed of four seasons, and each season is essentially one long poem. Within a poem, lines and phrases manifest and re-manifest in new positions with new punctuation lending new meanings. It’s sestina or pantoum-like in this way, but less predictable because there’s no prescribed algorithm for where or when the language will reappear. But like Januaries and Julys in the calendar of a wonderfull yeare, lines keep returning. As a matter of fact, the book opens with the lines: “Each year it’s the same damn thing / a constant red ache.” As an example of this reincarnation, take this section from “Spring Psalter”: “Darling, I leave you the forever unblooming / twig half-sunk in spring mud (…) / Darling, darling, darling: my voice is a branch that would reach.” Later in the same poem this becomes: “My voice dissipates into hush & whiffs of light, / A twig in spring mud (…) Darling, darling: my voice is a branch that would reach,” and even later in the same poem it becomes: “Darling, I leave you the forever unblooming. / (…) / Darling, I leave you.” I must admit, I’ve never read anything quite like it. Whereas the sestina is almost always (whether or not intentionally) silly, the pantoum always fraught with simple redundancy. The fact that the repetition here is not predetermined allows Pritts to make the poems more impactful.

There are gobs of white space on these pages; the poems take up no more than 14 lines, and there’s always space within and between lines. These are very airy, intangible, poems, thought-emotion machines with little concrete anchoring. Pritts has said that he’s more comfortable writing in a series or collection as a whole instead of writing each poem extempore and compiling them. As a result, this is not the musical album with poppy singles; this is the album that feels like one long song. Because of its holistic composition, it’s a very fast and pure read. Nothing feels forced into place like an errant puzzle piece. Nothing’s struggling to fit the theme; it’s tremendously organic.

As for the individual seasons, spring, here, is not the season of life, but the season of doubt. It’s as though Pritts ignores the conventional symbolism of the seasons and starts over. As a matter of fact, there’s a plenitude of language about renaming later in the book. Following spring, the poems of “Endless Summer” are each four lines long and are typed vertically, ivying up the page. Ironically, “Endless Summer” is the shortest season of the book, composed of only six four-line poems. Next, “Sonnets for the Fall” is an assemblage of 14 poems, 14 lines each. They have the same white space and airy quality as the other seasons, but this time they’re arranged as sonnets, though without the conventions of rhyme and meter. They do, however, address the classic sonnet theme of romantic love: there’s a relationship between the narrator and the “darling.” These pieces then accumulate into a 14-poem season. You’ve got to hand it to Pritts–he’s clever with his own form and moves with acuity therein. And it can be beautiful, as the sonnets don’t begin and end; they roll into each other like an avalanche of fallen leaves. Lastly, there’s winter “& then afterward.” Some of the sections of “Winter Constellations” actually read like haiku. Take “(xii)” for instance:

Snow dropped in clusters,
staggered & jagged
We don’t matter a bit.

Yet other slices of the winter section reveal some of my linguistic concerns. They seem too easy, too unmoored. Take this, for example:

& first sunlight.
Snow continues.
I could never close my eyes to light.
But there was no light
& you looked like night.

It takes a hefty setting of groundwork to build a reader’s trust enough to accept the preceding lines. I’m not sure I completely felt that trust, though I must confess that I haven’t read Pritts’ previous two collections, Honorary Astronaut (Ghost Road Press) and Sensational Spectacular (BlazeVOX).

So, what’s at stake in these cerebral, yet emotional pieces? It seems to be an abstract struggle against meaninglessness, against “not matter[ing] a bit.” The context is a romance, a troubled romance with a “you” and a “we.” This is a tough and lofty project, and the hovering language doesn’t always feel warranted. Take this section as a second example:

Seasons of travail, happy seasons of agony, the look
of pain & anguish, that same transcience, the seasons
transient, changing, always holding on & then the fall

Certainly, this is plucked up and laid bare in front of you, but it’s representative of the risk this collection takes. On the other hand, there are certainly very poignant, thought and language-provoking sections as well. Here is a personal favorite from “Spring Psalter”:

Proclaim, with me, the dawning
of an attempt to ascertain the meaning, to figure out
where the wires plug in & what, then, might happen.
Reaching, wind-blown, imprecise lack, worry—
these are the many names of the sorry condition
I hope to define. But who can understand the complex
vestiges that limit us, the vast machinery of what
has gone trudging before. Determinant & co-determinant!

In order to be fair, we as readers and critics must have room for more than one poetics. We must meet each poet on his or her own terms. The narrator of this collection operates with a frailty of doubt in a land where negative capability is a passport. What are his terms? In an interview with Elizabeth Hildreth of Bookslut, Pritts said of his own collection, “I want you dizzy & confused right alongside me; I want you befuddled & awestruck while holding my hand. There is no medicine when one is sicke at heart, save ‘comforting speech.’ That seemed crucial to what I was doing in these poems.” Certainly, this book is worth its quick read, and I have no doubt that it will leave you befuddled and dizzy; will it leave you awestruck and holding his hand?

____________

Bill Neumire’s reviews have appeared in the Cortland Review, Hiram Poetry Review, Pedestal Magazine, and Umbrella. Recent poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Rattle, Sugar House Review, The Toucan, and Cloudbank. He writes and teaches in Syracuse, New York with his wife and dog. He can be contacted at: wjneumire@msn.com.

January 14th, 2011

Link • Poems 1 Comment

Kent Newkirk

COMET HYAKUTAKE

I am a tourist. I get lost. I think maps are for the witless
who think they know where anyone is going. I wear
Hawaiian shirts in Paris, and stand by the principle
that suntan lotion is for mortals who burn.
For guidance, I take solace from Socrates, who said,
“I know nothing except the fact of my ignorance.”

I am human. I explore. I’ve seen satellites sent where no man
can see in search of answers no man can answer. I’m on a
mission, a quest. I want to go where Everyman has gone before.
So don’t get in the way with your maps and your questions,
don’t expect me to put the brakes on at the next easy exit,
and don’t get me going about stopping for directions.

I’m a believer, a believer in long trips with destinations undetermined
by compass points. I once swore there could be no such thing
as a wrong turn if you didn’t have a clue where you were going.
What—besides an infant—could possibly be more innocent
than a wrong turn, right?

But it wasn’t as if I picked that particular night for a baggage check,
a surprise inspection that spilled my contents,
revealing that on this and every other trip the suitcase
I’d been packing was full of nothing but empty,
just another case of one man ill-equipped to find himself,
once again, the Einstein of the obvious, discovering—
as if for the first time—that in March, after dark,
the desert is cold in Arizona, a wrong turn
down any world’s alley, too far from anyone’s home.

I am a listener. I long to hear. There was a time I heard nothing
but the sound of no one listening, the same refrain I found myself
begging to hear that night on the Cactus Plain of Arizona:
The sound of no one home.

Not a chance. Not that night. That night the wind sent a message,
and the stars passed unanimous sentence with quick-set, jury eyes,
lifeless eyes that looked, but were not dead. That night, whispers
weren’t the only voices I heard spooking me, turning out to be
nothing but me swearing, swearing, swearing that never in this life,
or the next, or any other should I have listened to the shamans
of Sedona or bikers of Parker, twin disciples of different prophets
preaching inbred gospels of finding one’s self in the airs of Arizona.

Because I found myself all right that night in March of ’96,
I found myself twisted, caught in the open, assumptions cut
by the wind, curled up tight in the fetal position at the foot
of the Buckskin Mountains, born again in that gouge on Earth
the maps define as the Bouse Wash, singled out, easy prey,
chaos so out of place where coyotes call the shots.

And where I found my fine self lost, lost in a staring contest
with the stars who saw right through me, to what’s behind me,
and what’s coming around to face me next, forcing me to turn
and see what they saw behind me, me seeing what I always see,
nothing but everything circling me, a mini-Earth spinning 360s
until those cold stares froze my feet and those same stars
turned on me, looked down on me, my old friends, fed up.

And so found, so found out, so confronted and condemned,
I cowered on that windswept bluff, a cow alone after dusk
with coyotes my invisible herders. Hoofs hobbled, cow knees
carving a hold on Earth’s sharp stone, my cow fingers clawed
at the edge of a canyon, scratching dirt for an answer, or a hole,
or an abandoned missile silo, or any place safe to go hide
on those nights when the stars stare back, looking at you
like you’re on their menu, and their Chef ’s Special is meat,
until you see yourself—as if for the first time—
as just another entrée in the eyes of minds made up
and ready to order you, a cow facing coyotes, alone.

And once again I found myself swearing, swearing, swearing
that if I ever escaped those penetrating eyes I would celebrate,
plead, lay myself prostrate before the priests of science,
the professors of faith, even poetry readers for sanity’s sake,
to please offer their latest takes on myths, on gods, on ETs,
or whatever it’s called when it’s way past late,
the sky is a blindfold, and the only light it lets in pricks the mask
of everything, unveiling traffic cop eyes unmoved by innocence,
unamused by wrong turns, unimpressed with man’s sense of direction.

Returning me home to the simple fact that I am a tourist.
I get lost. I think myself in circles, too secure in guidebook facts
claiming, for instance, that Comet Hyakutake consists
merely of frozen gases and dust, and its luminous halo
as it graced our sun is pure science—an illusion of miracles—
and not the miracle coyotes and their Bouse Wash prey sensed.

I am a whisper, the dark matter between stars, a speck best kept
out of sight. I am one man, one small step ahead of coyotes,
on the run from the lure of the pack. Upon escape, if I look back,
it’s apt to be from the wake of Comet Hyakutake’s tail,
me, debris trailing along, unleashing at last the songs within.
But tonight, if ever, coyotes listen. Hush, sweet howl
long stored in my heart.

from Rattle #33, Summer 2010

January 13th, 2011

Link • Poems 1 Comment

Jacob Newberry

YOU’RE 39, NOT YET A MAN

In Belgrade you’re the first faggot
I’ve met in maybe a year who admits it,
however quietly, though it takes you two days,
and I regret having shared my truth
with you so loosely. It’s like the old saying,
that which is revealed easily can not be much
worth saying. But this is not a truth
we can afford to avoid, not like not saying
                I’m from Mississippi
or
                                You must travel a lot, being in the military.
It’s a truth that’s greater than us,
       so why
do we hide it even from ourselves?
We are our only brothers.

You will not even say it clearly to me
the next day when I ask, when we are counting
dinars by the ATM in Novi Sad, when we forget
how much we’ll need for bus fare back
to Belgrade from our day trip to the north.
You’ll nod, or shrug; I cannot tell.
                                               We are far
from the officers who carry forms that will
unman you. What do you think they’ll
learn, if you speak the truth to me?
                                               Sucks cock
vigorously; swallows.

We have laughed all day,
despite the graying of your hair in profile,
or our shadows touching hands and faces
on the cobblestone public walk before us.
Yet here you only nod when I, about
the sleeveless, muscled shoe clerk, say:
You should take him to the back for a
                 special fitting.

What are you waiting for?
He speaks no English, and still you speak
                                         no truth.

You will say
                   There are other elements that matter
and ask me why all things must be spoken.
And I will tell you that the only truth that matters
is what we are willing to admit in daylight.

In Mississippi, once, a freshly
uncloseted friend sat with me at a table
in the middle of the place, sounds of coffee
grinding in the air, just so he could say:
                                  He made such a racket when we made love.
                 I thought the neighbors would complain.

And the heads, yes, they turned, for he had said it much
too loud, a challenge. The barista
upped the volume on a stocks report.
A woman clutched
                                               her purse.
But I relaxed. It had been too much,
but I’ve never faulted him
for speaking for us all.

In Mississippi this is also known as
                 foolishness,
for there, we learn, the men with hitches
on their trucks are waiting to take us for a drag.
That is why we queer boys never walk alone at night,
why my pockets overflow with
                                                                  projectiles
and the clerk at the auto shop knows my name.
I have bought three kinds of mace from him,
now stored in every place I will not
have occasion to remember when the men with hitches come.
                                               I do not think
of this as fear, though you will disagree.
                 This is truth,
however ugly. Hitches and mace,
the world’s acceptance of you and your unvoiced shame:
                 they are counterbalanced,
                                                                   they are the same.

from Rattle #33, Summer 2010

January 12th, 2011

Link • Audio, Poems, Tributes 3 Comments

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Peter Krass

ALL DRESSED IN GREEN

In the latest issue of Quagmire I find 7 new poems by Billy Collins.
In the new Kiss My Quarterly, 12 poems by Billy Collins.
Coming soon in Broken Meter, 18 poems by Billy Collins.
On NPR radio, Billy Collins reads “Wish I’d Written That.”
In my sleep, Billy Collins stars in a major motion picture
Directed by Billy Collins, produced by Billy Collins,
And featuring a supporting cast of thousands of Billy Collinses.

Tonight, at my local Barnes & Starbucks,
Billy Collins is giving a reading,
So naturally I go, all dressed in green,
Color of envy, money and snot.
Other striving poets fill nearly every seat,
Each wearing something green,
Each moving their lips as they quietly pray,
“O gods of poetry, whoever you are,
Please let a magic morsel fly
From the mouth of Billy Collins
And infect me, like a virus,
With whatever he has: The virus
Of being published,
The virus of selling books,
The virus of success.”

I sneer at them: “Stupid poets,”
I say, “That’s not how life works.”
But when Billy Collins appears at last,
Smiling and nodding, clearing his throat,
I find my seat in the very front row,
Open my mouth as wide as it goes,
And breathe.

from Rattle #33, Summer 2010
Tribute to Humor

Where Am I?

You are currently viewing the archives for January, 2011 at Rattle: Poetry for the 21st Century.