June 5, 2011

Review by Rachel Lancaster

JAZZ
by Jéanpaul Ferro

Honest Publishing
ISBN 978-0-9566658-6-7
2011, 86 pp., $10.95
www.honestpublishing.com

In Jéanpaul Ferro’s latest collection of poetry, aptly entitled Jazz, we find a milieu of desperate people living in fraught and distressful times. Jazz is a lush examination of our modern civilization from the vantage point of an anxious post-September 11th world. The etymology of Jazz is one of fate, the fate of humans from all different societies, all of whom live under the same current realm of so-called “Liquid” modernity: its effects different on each soul depending on where you happen to be living on this globe of ours. Modernity will have one type of effect on a European or American, and then it will have a completely different effect on someone else living in the Middle East or in India. Jéanpaul Ferro bravely takes us on an expedition through this difficult examination of the psyche, where the Internet has become one of the main contributors to globalization, where God is nowhere and everywhere within the same society, and people’s lives, no matter where they are, have became merely an act in a play that they create for themselves as a desperate way of ending their own physical and emotional pain.

Jéanpaul Ferro’s previous collection, Essendo Morti – Being Dead was nominated for the 2010 Griffin Prize in Poetry, in part because of its world view and for its examination into the exploitation of humans all around the globe. From the concentration camps of North Korea to the battlefields of Iraq to the splintering of the America society, Ferro put everything on the table and what came out was some of the most poignant work we’ve seen in a while. Jazz is no different in its scope as it takes on vigilantism, the imprint the Iraq war has left on its veterans, the news to a mother of a young soldier killed in action, and the fear, apprehension, and paranoia so evident in the minutes of every American life.

In the haunting “Hallelujah,” a parent is told of the news that their child has been killed overseas in the war. Instantly an entire lifetime flashes before their eyes. The seasons are now forever changed. Memories are altered. A life-path different from anything a parent can ever conceive is suddenly their heartbreaking reality.

Looking beyond the porch, the rain slowly
traveling down the claim shell road,
darkening skies, where whiteness used to be;

the houses along the road screaming of your death,
the blue one, the maroon one, the melancholy yellow,
one liked music; one liked what a picture could be;
your small ghost running across their lawns…

In the poem, “John Updike,” instead of taking a point of view from the left or a point of view from the right, Ferro simply diagnoses the feelings of both fear and loss on both sides of the coin. In one place a feeling of fear causes a reaction, while in another place someone loses someone else dear to them. In the end somehow it is clear that everyone loses.

I am running from the pain all the time now … you know the one,
that single empty chamber that has no name;

It runs in the dark door in extreme pallor,
a disgust quotient of 10 over 4 in our great American life—

that bomb coming through your doorway courtesy
of the USA;

a person disappearing, delicately diaphanous as they go
into the nothingness forever; shhhh! whispered; a kind of death
that we pretend God doesn’t hear;

that bloody spot on the ground where someone once stood,

a spot where their child will stand twenty years from now,

—the polychrome buildings glimmering in the thin reflection
of God, his personal photog spinning around, over and over,
to get the picture.

In “Letter from a Soldier” a veteran of Iraq or Afghanistan has returned back to the U.S., but cannot escape the horrors and bloodshed witnessed. The war and the so-called real world blur until both of them are almost indistinguishable.

I look for you in the dark,
beyond the Massachusetts woods
where the wolves hide at the edge
of the field,

all night long as the rockets
rain down just a little bit harder;

I go through all the alleys as the
buildings come down and everything
turns to ash,

But I am just a little bit broken,
broke in all the right places—
a million little jewels that split apart

all across the ground.

Not all of Jazz is blood, guts, and war. There are many pieces that sparkle and shine with joyous happiness and sublime devotion. Some poems are quirky, others lustful and evocative. In “The Dream House” desire, adoration, and spiritual awakening all meld into one blissful prayer to a lover.

Her soul was the color of God,
a thunderhead of apple red, and in wavelengths,
vestigial hips and thighs/the drunkenness
that comes thereafter;

the palpable lure of Everest, the way you
conquer it when it is easily conquering you,
translucent as night, a shrouded thing to wrap
and unwrap…

In other pieces, the entire poem is a metaphor. This is evident in “Life on Mars” where we spend most of the poem in a dream state on another planet only to find ourselves realizing a deeper meaning of death and dying. In “Arrete! C’est ici L’Empire de la Mort—,” Ferro takes us to the Paris underground, to the old catacombs which are now a cemetery where millions of bodies have been piled on top of each other over the centuries. The poem is seemingly about a couple running through the catacombs when in reality it is about the haunting ledge of being in a relationship with someone with suicidal tendencies.

Jéanpaul Ferro’s Jazz is full of this gut-wrenching diversity that moves us through a realm of heartbreaking worlds full of longing and contradiction. It is high art. It is modern life. It is the very world that we all see around us. As a whole, Jazz is a time capsule for the past ten years of American life. Rather than judge the actions, outcomes, and motives of mankind, Ferro weaves a tapestry full of flashes and stories and lets us decide what is right and what is wrong. It is one of the more elegant collections of poems I have read in a while. And like real jazz, it leaves you dizzy and drunk and panting for more.

____________

Rachel Lancaster is a freelance writer and poet from Corvallis, Oregon. She can be contacted at: lancasterr17@yahoo.com.

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April 10, 2011

Review by Jéanpaul Ferro SELF-INFLICTED by Drake A. Lightle

SELF-INFLICTED
by Drake A. Lightle

Goldfish Press
500 E. Magnolia Avenue
Eustis, Florida 32726
ISBN 9780982466933
2011, 184 pp., $16.95
www.Goldfishpress.com

Missouri native Drake A. Lightle’s debut collection of poetry, Self-Inflicted, is one of those rare debuts where the frankness may be as raw and honest as a dying man’s last words.  In this age of instant communication, information overload, and train-of-thought/seat-of-your-pants-living, Drake A. Lightle puts a stake in the ground and lets his mind’s wanderings ripple out into a prose that is exactly as his mind sees things.  Quotes, snippets of thought, cliff notes, chemical mutations, and conversations all become one almost like a dazzling Charles Bukowski on methamphetamine.

In his prose, Lightle can draw us down into those elementary particles where sometimes God co-mingles with his own creations:  “something akin to free will yet governed by universal laws and truths / god dwells hungrily in the sub-atomic tapestry of commingling flesh.”  Or he can simply take us to a Sheraton Hotel bar, where there is a married woman and a night full of possibilities: “we’re here with the hipsters / and gangsters / and yuppie yippie wanksters / trying to blend in / to the scenery / you drinking wine / me drinking vodka / and thinking about where we really should be / somewhere else.”

Self-Inflicted is both a journey and map of the human soul.  Everything is covered here: the pain and loss of every human failing, the search for self and the reason for life’s existence, the bitterness at looking all around out beyond your own pale space where this infinite color exists but only as walls to keep you in.  This is most evident in the poem “A Lust For Insomnia”:

I’ve seen the sunrise more times than I’ve been awakened
by it these past six months.
I have forsaken respite and embraced the notion that
time is illusion hiding in shadows of self—
a gentle volley of light and dark
through the blue-hued portals of efficacy
broken into spectral radiance.

There certainly is an underlining theme of hope and wonder within Self-Inflicted, but these hopes always seemed to get dashed as though there is a good Lightle and a bad Lightle at war with one another.  And within this war of his own demons, Drake A. Lightle seems to have captured another war, one of someone who is caught within the mechanisms of the machine—a place where you are born, but one in which you can never get out of.  This conflict is best demonstrated in the amusingly entitled “USER_DELETED (Monkey Edit: Short Re-Mix)”:

two buildings,
each filled with row after row
of cubicles,
with skies of buzzing florescent light
casting soft whiteness on gray faces
sitting in chairs at desks
in front of more buzzing light
from monitors;

fingers surgically attached to keyboards;
eyes reading words of desperate prayers –
poems and prose and plays and short stories
and novels spilling from the minds of monkeys
banging on keyboards in a virtual zoo –

monkeys searching for truth and meaning
in experience,
meaning of hate and despair and sorrow
and love and hope and bliss;

monkeys freezing in the shadow of the monolith of life

desperate to make sense of it all.

In the end, Lightle surmises the inevitable: “There was blood on the sheets / There was blood on the pillow.”  And the machine wins out again.  And the human self is lost in a gray world where each person is simply mortar and brick to feed the soul of something much larger than any one individual.  Yet in the title piece, “Self-Inflicted” the epiphany is something so much more simple: “I blame it on appetite.”

Self-Inflicted is a gritty, granular illumination of self chosen pain.  Like most of us, Drake A. Lightle has painted the town, wrote it all down, and in the end, like a very wise man, has asked for redemption.  The blood trail in getting to this place is written all over this book.  All you have to do is go along on his very haunted ride.

___________

An 8-time Pushcart Prize nominee, Jéanpaul Ferro’s work has appeared on National Public Radio, Contemporary American Voices, Columbia Review, Emerson Review, Connecticut Review, Sierra Nevada Review, Portland Monthly, The Providence Journal, Arts & Understanding Magazine, and others. He is the author of All The Good Promises (Plowman Press, 1994), Becoming X (BlazeVox Books, 2008), You Know Too Much About Flying Saucers (Thumbscrew Press, 2009), Hemispheres (Maverick Duck Press, 2009) Essendo Morti – Being Dead (Goldfish Press, 2009), nominated for the 2010 Griffin Prize in Poetry; and the forthcoming Jazz (Honest Publishing, 2011). He is represented by the Jennifer Lyons Literary Agency.

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November 10, 2009

Review by Rachel Lancaster

ESSENDO MORTI – BEING DEAD
by Jéanpaul Ferro

Goldfish Press
500 E. Magnolia Avenue
Eustis, Florida 32726
ISBN 978-0-9824669-0-2
2009, 123 pp., $14.95
www.Goldfishpress.org

There is something magical, something at a deep unspoken level, within the passages of Jéanpaul Ferro’s new collection of poetry, Essendo Morti – Being Dead. Americans have been in a state of “being dead” since the September 11th terrorist attacks. Jéanpaul Ferro explores this theme of being dead as though it is a shared cultural feeling, similar to Nietzsche exclaiming over one hundred years ago “God is dead!” This is definitely a new truth that he is putting forth across the downtowns and side streets of America. No, according to Ferro, the American Dream has already died, and now the masses are in a state of becoming a living dead. It is red state verses blue state. Liberal verses conservative. God verses Darwin. A dream verses reality.

In the title poem, “Essendo Morti – Being Dead,” all of this is already self-evident:

Winter arrives, the birds all gone,
the skies stained in arctic blues,

we tire out easily through the hallucination,
our minds wet by the explosions,

we watch the thin rivers snake through the backyards
(looking for signs of life),

in dreams the bodies float away like homemade boats
down to the frozen waterfall,

night unearths every mass grave—
the intrinsic momentum-phenomena of light,

we fall to our knees to petition God,
beg him like we beg him to be saved,

each dream lasts up past springtime,
beneath the DMZ, all the orbiting planets,

until a simpler life—the migrating birds,
smoke rustling about our chimney tops.

Ferro moves back and forth out of a sort of magic surrealism. A country can be a woman, God or alienation can be a computation, and symbols can become words. In the poem, “W (Providence)” he says about the rules of life and love and writing and politics and his generation … everything: “here are the new rules: there are no rules.” Oh, you got guts brother!

Essendo Morti – Being Dead is a lot like Bob Dylan or maybe like PCP—it facilitates self-exploration into those dreamlike states of mind that it leaves you in. In “Dreams of Men” you are suddenly in a North Korean concentration camp. Ferro takes us there as though we are that prisoner; as though he can whisk us away through a dark portal and drop us right there behind those walls. And after you have been beaten and humiliated for 3 ½ years your wants are so simple that they are breathtakingly haunting:

you have a 5-foot-by-5-foot underground cell,
you are hit, you are raped, and you are tortured,
you creep, you crawl, and you cower,
you are crushed, you are experimented on,
you are rushed off your feet by freezing water,
you are poisoned, starved, gassed, you are cut up,

you are told your dead children’s names over and over;

I smashed my fingertips so they would kill me,
but they laughed at me for over 3 ½ years instead,

I huddled in the corner all night and tried to dream—

dream of my fingertips touching the wet sands of the ocean,
dream of the bright garden stars rising out in the backyard,
dream of your hips with cinnamon and parsley,
dream of your body rising sunward like a blue sunflower,

dream of flying south over the distant mountain tops,
so we can die together in a beautiful peace.

Jéanpaul Ferro speaks not only for his American brethren, but also for his human breathren across this giant blue planet of ours. There is a rich world view here even when he is writing about America—a world view that encompasses different perspectives and different styles, and might be suited to include everyone, not just the population of one place. A brilliant new talent, he has taken decorum and thrown in out, has taken the sanctuary of poetry-academia and thrown it out, and has found a way to make all of this seem old and yet new again. Bravo for Essendo Morti! I could hardly get enough. And now I am waiting for whatever might be next.

____________

Rachel Lancaster is a freelance writer and poet from Corvallis, Oregon. She can be contacted at:  lancasterr17@yahoo.com.

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