August 20, 2013

 Review by Gail Fishman GerwinThe Place I Call Home by Maria Mazziotti Gillan

THE PLACE I CALL HOME
by Maria Mazziotti Gillan

NYQ Books
PO Box 2015
Old Chelsea Station
New York, NY 10113
ISBN:  978-1-935520-67-2
2012, 81 pp., 14.95
www.nyqbooks.org

Anyone who has read Maria Mazziotti Gillan’s body of work knows that this prolific poet follows one of the major tenets of writing: write what you know. Here is where she excels and The Place I Call Home meets expectations for honesty and insight. Those who know her poetry always want more and those who read it for the first time are immersed in a life somewhat conflicted: filled with warmth yet riddled with guilt, touched with success yet plagued by inadequacy. She unabashedly mingles pain with love; she takes us on a journey that is personal and universal at the same time, and through her craft she offers deep understanding of people who populate her worlds past and present.

Gillan is a child of immigrants; we know that immediately. Her childhood home is lean in material goods yet filled with richness of a noisy family, of foods we can taste right off the page, of lush gardens and the gardeners who tend them. From the start we are transported to a back yard where there are “vines heavy with ripe tomatoes” and the “tart aroma of zucchini and eggplant.” We get to know her mother, father, Zio Guillermo (“Zia Louisa’s fourth husband”) among others, and we see Maria—a skinny, bookish child in a “world … as small and perfect as it ever be.” Food plays a prominent role in descriptions of her childhood: Bosco, Easter’s roast chicken and potatoes, and cinnamon and vanilla that recall her mother’s baking. As in a good novel, her narrative poems are truly structured: she moves from A to B to C, then back to A or B and onward, always building on previous poems’ foundations and constructing singular foundations within singular poems as if weaving memories on a loom straight from Paterson, NJ’s, famed silk mills. She uses images that evoke a time when shoe stores x-rayed feet, when girls sewed their own graduation dresses, when tables were covered with oil-cloth.

Gillan’s poems—rhythmic, pounding with content that craves rereading—are accessible stories. Her “characters,” really those who formed the cocoon of love around her and at the same time challenged her, come to life in many layers. She tells us that her father worked in factories all his life, yet countered this toil (she offers, “I’d shoot myself if I had to do this job”) with voracious reading, knowledge of current events, and his ability as the designated neighborhood tax accountant without a formal degree. He could “add, multiply, and divide in his head faster than an adding machine.” She tells us of this proud man who, sidelined by a tumor, “wouldn’t let my mother apply for welfare,” so the family lived on “spaghetti and farina and my mother’s homemade bread every day.” In one of her previous collections (more than a dozen), Gillan writes of not wanting her date to see her father and his limp—she carries guilt for it to this day, but frees herself enough to share this information.

This freedom of information pervades the latest collection. In her workshops and at retreats, and in her book Writing Poetry to Save Your Life, she alludes to a crow on a shoulder that acts as a pecking censor for truths that lie within. She takes her own advice to get rid of the crow and taps her deepest feelings—and secrets—to produce poetry that is forthright and uncloaked. This is evident in stories of her youth when, despite many loving acts (“she’d wrap my hair in white rags/ to make it curl”), her mother (whom we know by other poems she adored) “was old fashioned and strict/ and I didn’t have toys.” We feel the universal ambivalence on the poet’s part. Who doesn’t feel ambivalence in the parent/child relationship?

The consummate love of mother endures. When it comes to this mother who remains within Gillan almost two decades after her internment in the “mausoleum drawer where we shelved her,” we see a daughter longing for the aromas of garlic and meatballs, for the heat of an iron crisping the hand-me-downs from Zia Christina’s daughter (we can feel the poet’s embarrassment at wearing them), for “basting threads piled like clouds around,” for this mother who did piecework at home, a tiny woman Gillan’s brother called “the little general,” for a woman who served espresso in “tiny china cups.” This mother, who never went beyond third grade in her native San Mauro, Italy, and “was ashamed that she never learned/ to read English,” scrimped to buy her daughter “a Smith Corona portable typewriter in a pink case/ so that I could be the writer/ I said I wanted to be.”

The reader is warmed, concerned, and protective for the child who wasn’t comfortable in her own skin (“I’ve always been shy in my body”), then—a little more than halfway through the book—is stunned by Gillan’s transition to her adult life and into a marriage that becomes marred by her husband’s debilitating illness. As she soars to success in her vocation that takes her to places where praise and academic demands abound, he remains at home, declining. Here is where Gillan tosses the shoulder crow even higher into the wind and delves into what she calls “the cave.” Where others might hide the anguish she faces, she bares it and shares it eloquently. She reverts to apostrophe in many of these poems, addressing her husband as if he were there, letting her words assuage her disappointment and often her guilt: “I try to pull our house/ complete with nurse’s aides and medicine and/ wheelchairs, behind me like a huge red wagon …” We feel her anger guilt, frustration, and empathy all rolled into a single convoluted emotion when a crisis occurs just as she “was trying/ to get ready to leave to drive up 17 west to Binghamton.”

Even her poems that start out with Nature’s beauty or quirks—“Each spring I fall in love again with the sun’s hand on my face”—form a contrast with the terrible reality of her husband’s illness. She cannot allow herself to enjoy the sun’s warmth for long; in this state she cannot lasso the warmth that enveloped her as a child. She feels alone and she is not afraid to tell us. Gillan is relentless in this group of poems; she can’t “fix what is wrong.” She never leaves a feeling unsaid; she never leaves a stanza unclean. She beats out the rhythms of the inevitable in free verse, in triplets, in wide poems, in narrow lines, in patterns that keep the eye moving among the words she needs to write, the only medicine she can dispense to help herself heal. And yet we are not uncomfortable as we enter her grief; she turns the mood with reminders of the strong love between man and wife to parry the sadness: “… the you/ I love is there in the way you hold my hand to your cheek,/ the way you smooth back my hair.” When her husband returns (“wobbling and unsteady on your feet”) in his wheelchair from negotiating for a patio set with the neighbor next door, she writes “… even after forty years,/ this is how you show you love me.”

She lets us in on her worries about her children, comparing the breakup of her daughter’s marriage to the earthquake in Japan with exquisite metaphor: “My daughter has been touched by the radiation/ of her husband’s betrayal.” She aches for her grandson, the target of middle-school bullies. She talks of telling her granddaughter “how beautiful she is,/ how creative and intelligent …” Gillan realizes that “the voice inside her,/ that crow,/ is louder than mine,” and we remember the book’s earlier poems that describe this grandmother’s own insecurity even into adulthood, a “girl,/ so introverted she cannot speak, who has followed me my whole/ life, that girl who hides behind my bluster and courage …”

Gillan’s poems are rich with images. We can feel her family in that house on 17th Street, we can picture green mountains where “the music of the universe is everywhere,” we can watch a family of ducks cross River Street in Paterson “as they move graceful as dancers onto the water … into the dazzling morning light.” So much is revealed and at the same time, so much is unsaid in her poems, a perfect balance that lets us read between the lines and interpret her perceptions and her intent.

Maria Gillan epitomizes courage. Her words, her poetic grace, her appreciation for the warp and woof of her art, are gifts to a community that does not tire of hearing her voice. This community silently thanks her mother for that Smith Corona.

In hot violets and reds, the beautiful cover of The Place I Call Home depicts Gillan’s alter ego, luxuriating on a chaise lounge, a book in each hand. This is a far cry from the poet’s peripatetic life, in which she heads two poetry centers four hours apart, in which she teaches internationally, in which she hosts weekend retreats that disseminate her skills and mentor poets of all ages, in which she crosses the country to accept the accolades that shower her, and in which she continues to honor her beloved hometown of Paterson. This is a book than cannot be digested in a single reading. It is essential to find a chaise lounge (or even a kitchen chair with a tiny cup of espresso at the ready) and come home with Maria Mazziotti Gillan.

__________

Gail Fishman Gerwin authored several plays as well as two poetry collections: Sugar and Sand, 2010 Paterson Poetry Prize finalist, and Dear Kinfolk (ChayaCairn Press), recipient of a 2013 Paterson Award for Literary Excellence. Her poetry, reviews, essays, and fiction are widely published. She is the founder of inedit, a Morristown, NJ, writing/editing firm, and associate poetry editor of the journal Tiferet.

 

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May 15, 2013

Review by Gail Fishman GerwinI Wanted a City by Janet Marks

I WANTED A CITY
by Janet Marks

WordTech Editions
P.O. Box 541106
Cincinnati, OH 45254-1106978
ISBN: 1-59661-162-6
2013, 91 pp., $18.00
www.wordtechweb.com

We read Janet Marks’s poetry with the expectation that she should have something to teach us. She has lived through the Great Depression, two world wars, a presidential assassination and a handful of assassination attempts, and moon walks. She has crossed the Y2K line, she has experienced parental love and emotional distance. She has gone through divorce and has lived in many locales: urban, rural, crisp, muddy. Indeed she has stories to share.

She has survived with the insight—fortunate for readers—to provide us with a sweeping view of her own history in context of the history of preceding generations. I Wanted a City is her first full-length collection, one that has been building since her middle years. The book’s acknowledgments run the gamut of literary journals and her work along the road to this volume earned awards, a prestigious writing residency, and ongoing accolades from colleagues.

Some of the book’s most resonant poems come from her life in San Francisco, where the poem “Small View of the Big One” takes us to “… 2 a.m., my bed/ has surged with the inhaling-exhaling earth in/ Mill Valley where small tremors haunt the countryside …” She goes on to pull us through a quake-filled day (“I think the driver is playing with the brakes” …  “the Bay Bridge has split apart”) on to 5 p.m. when she spots a “black and white dog” that has “bolted through a window in shock.” The dog teeters on a ledge; she urges him to go back, go in, “but he will not go.” In four short stanzas, she addresses the fear in all of us as disaster strikes, down to one of the smaller, helpless beings who can rely only on instinct. Where can we run to escape life’s big ones? What can we do with our fears? She leaves us on the ledge with these questions; she makes us worry. We don’t know if the dog survives. A true Bay Area resident, she is almost casual with her descriptions of the horror, just another day when “houses and apartments/ built on fill are caving-in and burning” while in counterpoint her tender heart enters the psyche of a defenseless creature. We are with her in her shaking bed, we are with her on the bus, we are with her as she walks in the street. Interestingly, in this and many of her poems, Marks does not always use end-punctuation. She maintains the momentum long after the poem is finished; we provide our own periods after returning to reread.

The book’s very next poem abruptly takes Marks back to a distant time and place, to her tenancy in the womb as another trick of Nature—Texas floods—assails the rural population. She notes, “my immigrant mother/ with me in her womb/ climbs a chair/ until father comes to save us.” Deep inside her mother, she is part of the family, part of the “us” that holds it together. She ages several years within two stanza’s of this poem, “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” to allude to her mother’s instinctual response to “my fevered brain … fetching more and more water/ with more and more pieces of herself.”  Mother as protector, mother as nurturer, and in “Growing Up In The Thirties,” mother as stern guide:

she wanted me
to be a piano prodigy but intervened
between the piano & me
compelling me to give it up.

In this poem Marks reflects her generation, one where “college was inaccessible” and studying shorthand the practical path for young women.

Mother as someone distant and private, mother as an angry wife who “… raved at father as though he were to blame” for the Depression. (This father was her mother’s second husband; she lost her first love in the flu epidemic.) The poem “Seeking a Life” goes on to tell how this father borrowed money from an uncle who “never let him forget.” Marks’s mother struggles with her own secret demons, her lifetime of stoic loneliness:

forgetting two old parents she’d sailed away from
never seemed to turn back until the letter
came that her mother was gone
she went upstairs & cried alone

—“Growing Up In The Thirties”

Marks inserts some of her own isolation in this poem; she speaks of sailing into marriage and parenting and throughout the book offers glimpses of her feelings about these states In “Visiting Mother” she speaks of a marriage “cracking in ice storms.” In “A True Victorian Lady” her mother, who practiced her Judaism alone, silently lighting the candles, fasting on Yom Kippur, could not accept her daughter’s divorce and showed her distaste: “To her my words were a foreign tongue/ she picked off herself like fleas.” Despite this disapproval, Marks separates herself from the marriage, yet hints at a type of emotional reconciliation with her former husband in “Visiting Mother”: “now apart we’re kinder/ on the porch he brings our granddaughter home offers me/ his car—I walk this time.” She also lets readers know that despite her innate ability to survive as an independent woman, she misses her parents and her children. On one of her walks that populate the book, this time in Golden Gate Park, “I reach for the steel stays of my mother/ Her voice of loss grips me to her” and she imagines her father, who “comes to say there is too much rain/ on the grave where his bones whiten.” She tells us that the “children I have spawned have learned to swim alone.”

Marks, who describes herself as a wayfarer, belies generations of women who remained in sour liaisons. She comes across as a person who has gone through the funnel of hardship and disappointment yet is whole, who is satisfied with the woman she’s become, a woman unafraid to test herself in many locales. She often views these locales—and exquisitely shares the visuals with us—on foot (“and a blob of jelly quivers to my stick/ makes a hideous face at me./ I am not afraid”) or from a seat on a bus. We ride with her “downtown on the 163 Bus/ on Louisiana Street” when she spots billboards with life messages; in San Francisco she’s on the way to a Woody Allen movie by bus when the quake interfered. She climbs hills, she relishes all she encounters wherever she lives: the animal sculptures of Bufano in Sausalito, at San Francisco’s Aquatic Park pier, where she walks “near the edge of living” with “fourteen Cambodian students …”

Janet Marks has given readers the gift of her youth, the gift of geography, the gift of history, and the gift of her maturity. Yes, she has a lot to teach. She teaches us how to take routes that help us cope with what we cannot control. She teaches us how important it is to embrace the past and to see the present as adventure with no age limitations. And she teaches us how to create a work of art that combines specificity and metaphor. In “I Open My Eyes and It’s Spring,” she carries apples, eggplant, and Sunkist (oranges?) up Masonic Hill; “It’s cold without sun,” she says. Just when we become comfortable with the familiar, in the next moment we see that “the wind heaves me into the Pacific.” Where is she going? Why is she flying? Then back to a beggar at Portsmouth Square who says “all of my former lives were insane.” No insanity here, just a gift of tale. Janet Marks wanted a city and so she created a universal city that transcends any single place in this beautiful collection that mandates several readings to wrap our senses, our emotions, and our eyes around what the poet sees. I Wanted A City is a collection that needs to be read and reread.

__________

Gail Fishman Gerwin’s poetry and reviews appear in journals including Paterson Literary Review, Lips, Caduceus, Pirene’s Fountain, Journal of New Jersey Poets, and The American Voice in Poetry. Her memoir Sugar and Sand was named a 2010 Paterson Poetry Prize finalist and her new collection Dear Kinfolk, was published in 2012. She is associate poetry editor of the journal Tiferet. A Paterson, NJ, native she lives in Morristown, NJ, and is principal of the communications firm inedit.

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February 20, 2012

Review by Gail Fishman GerwinOn Location by Nancy Scott

ON LOCATION
by Nancy Scott

March Street Press,
3413 Wilshire Dr.
Greensboro, NC 27408
2011, 34 pp., $9.00
ISBN 1-59661-162-6
www.marchstreetpress.com

I first heard Nancy Scott read about two years ago; her on-target, narrative dissection of life experiences in societal context impressed me. As so many poets do, we swapped books. Fast-forward to 2011: I wrote a review of her chapbook Detours & Diversions, soon to appear in a journal.

A talented artist with collages winning numerous awards in juried exhibits, the poet now has written the ekphrastic poetry chapbook On Location. I asked for an advance copy and took a trip to a museum in Scott’s mind. The poems run a gamut of almost two centuries, with title paintings from 1820 to the near present. What remains steady in her poetic treatment of these disparate works is her willingness to suspend the factual face of the art with a trip to fantasy beyond the population on the canvas. She draws the reader into these fantasies and by doing so, the paintings become alive, merging the truth of what is contained within the frame with the possibility of what may have been or what can be.

This is evident from the start in the first poem, Yuli Yulievich Klever’s “Along the Riverbank,” with only three people—miniscule, almost afterthoughts in context of the expansive natural scene—depicted in the actual painting: a man and boy seen from behind in straw hats and a distant young girl in a white dress. That isn’t enough for Scott so she writes about the girl’s mother (nowhere to be seen)—

who, pregnant with a fifth child, stirs boiling linens
over a wood-fired stove . . . desperate fish flopping . . .their eyes wide open.

A bucolic field turns into a family dynamic; the mother instructs her daughter to tell her father (Where is he? What does he look like?) to:

gut those fish outside and throw the heads to the cats.

“ . . . Riverbank” is one of several in the book’s introductory segment “Russian Poems.” She dedicates the book (the other section simply named “Beyond Russia”) to her grandfather Harry Ollswang, whose U.S. citizenship became final in 1914, and we travel with her to his native country, where poems allow the paintings to reflect on the people in her own life. In Vladimir Krantz’s “Last Snow Before Spring,” she connects the peaceful wintry vista with her grandfather’s emigration as she imagines it—the cost of his visa, his homesickness as he traveled through the countryside not unlike that the frigid scene on the artist’s canvas, and his reticence about his early life, perhaps too painful to recall but allowing him the joy to relish his granddaughter:

yet he wanted to please me. Have you been good?
Then he’d flick silver dollars from behind my ears.

Scott pays this familial love forward, allows the art to reveal her devotion to her granddaughter Leah. An 1891 pencil and gouache work by Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky, “By the Shore in a Stormy Sea,” brings to mind “God . . . having had a really bad temper tantrum.” This evokes a scene from the poet’s own life a century and a quarter later, as Leah creates an art storm during a peaceful afternoon; while they made potato prints in “swirling magentas, greens, and blues,” the child suddenly takes black marker to paper, scribbling until the storm is over–my hand’s tired, she says. As a grandmother, I was struck with the universality of this young child’s vibrancy, attention span (and ensuing lack thereof) and guileless honesty; when we told our own grandson that he had a new sister, his response was “Can I color now?” Leah reappears in a later poem, based on Ernst Spuehler’s “The Chicken Coop.” Scott tells us that her father bought the 1951 watercolor as an investment which remains on her living room wall, without knowing how the purchase would pay off:

Six-year-old Leah and I stare at the painting, consider
the colors and the fate of those chickens . . .
his great-granddaughter’s curiosity is a more favorable return
than Dad could ever have hoped for.

As poets, we find prompts in overheard conversations, city or country scenes, pain and joy. Scott uses artwork in the book as personal prompts that welcome visits to her interior. An unknown artist’s “Tuscan Farmhouse,” a painting her father bought when they were together at the popular Washington Square (Greenwich Village) Outdoor Art Exhibit, comes to mind years later in Tuscany’s Fiesole, when she comes upon a scene like the painting, yet:

Not my father’s painted farmyard,
the angle of the roofs was wrong . . .

but when she observes a white-haired man tending rabbit cages:

For a moment, I was spying on my father.

Nowhere am I more in awe of Scott’s creative power than in Carl Holsoe’s “A Lady in an Interior.” When I googled the painting, I saw a reproduction that simply shows the back of a seated woman, solitary, reading next to a window, a mirror on the wall. Is this enough for Scott? No, she takes her readers to a festering story populated by the woman, her maid, her husband, the gardener—each with a point of view, all relaying tales of lust, tragedy, maternity, cuckoldry, and abandonment. Like small-town gossips well schooled in Schadenfreude, we are fascinated to follow these characters into a convoluted plot; we become parties to deception and we cannot wait to spread the lurid news.

Scott is intuitive enough to place herself in Van Gogh’s psyche (“Bedroom at Arles”): “I am overcome . . .Tomorrow, I will look/to rent a small studio, where I can finally begin to paint.” She is wise enough to recognize the importance of relationships, using a gypsy and lion as a metaphor for interdependence (Rousseau’s “The Sleeping Gypsy”): “So it is with survival: one stands guard, one sleeps.” With the curiosity and skill of a forensic detective, she examines Oda Peters’ “Woman in Blue,” and wonders about what she “can’t see in a small jewel box” that has captured the subject’s attention: “Perhaps a silver barrette/set with turquoise he bought for her on their trip/to New Mexico . . . Perhaps he died in a war or left her/for somebody else . . .” Scott, the investigator, lets the reader know there are clues yet untouched, while the woman on the edge of the bed seeks comfort—or pain—in relics of the past. Don’t we all?

Nancy Scott guides us through these artworks as if we are in a museum without hours of operation, without security guards. Her words allow us to step over the ropes, to touch the art on her poetry wall. As for me, On Location guarantees that I will not move through future exhibits without the wonder of what is beyond the canvas.

_____________

Gail Fishman Gerwin’s poetry and reviews appear in journals including Paterson Literary Review, Lips, Caduceus, Pirene’s Fountain, Journal of New Jersey Poets, Edison Literary Review, and The American Voice in Poetry. Her memoir Sugar and Sand was named a 2010 Paterson Poetry Prize finalist, and she earned four consecutive Allen Ginsberg Poetry Awards honorable mentions. She is an associate poetry editor of Tiferet. A Paterson, NJ, native she lives in Morristown, NJ, and is principal of the communications firm inedit.

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