Monday, August 05, 2019

Review of Eric Greinke’s Invisible Wings, Presa Press, 2019

Eric Greinke


Review of Eric Greinke’s Invisible Wings, Pressa Press, 2019


Eric Greinke is a poet with a moderate pallet and a subtle intelligence. His poems notice things, ordinary things, and pursue them; he is curious but he treads lightly and could easily be disregarded because of his plain-spoken disguise. He is worth slowing down for. In his latest collection of 44 short poems, Invisible Wings, every sound and cadence rings true, if the reader listens carefully. He writes of a “nympho wind” that sings songs “into our rainy brains.” This is a “kissing” wind that arouses someone, whose breath goes wild and cries out “like a poem / just before birth.”

The first poem in the collection is “Wings,” where Grienke flirts with the cosmos whose stars were named after “ancient Gods” and whose direction spreads like an (imagined) expanding universe. Its energy is not showy or boastful, and Greinke delivers in a style of language that one could call, without error, plain. Yet, much of the ordinariness in the footsteps of the lines causes a likely embarrassment for one who suddenly realizes that the poem she’s reading has got quite out of hand. “Our collective neurons,” the poet writes, “back beyond the big bang,” have reverberated to become

an infinitesimal compact
of impacted selves,
their endings encoded in
expanding beams of energy.
To recognize the power of the Greinke’s language, his eschewing of sensation, his insistence on exactitude, is to grope about, “blind in every dimension / but our poor human senses.” But arise! We must scramble to keep up with the fusions, dimensions, disasters, collisions, with each “atom alone but connected.“ Really, you have to run to keep up with what’s going down in this poem, until it “plays on all the pages & stages of our days.” He doesn’t need to mention WS.

Now that we see that nothing at all is ordinary about the poem, it’s basically over. The story, that is. But not without transformation. The entire process, the cause and effect, the eons of time, and the vast universe itself are

cast. . . into the frozen fire,
transformed again into invisible wings.

Still, when an opening poem is a tour de force, one may reasonably expect to find some wobbles or potholes up ahead. And Greinke has included a few poems here that may have benefitted from a rest. “The Sunken Dream,” for instance, can be flatfooted in places, or may not know what it is really trying to convey. We get the gist; but perhaps a pivotal image and some liquid language could dive into the deep of a flooded valley of drowned houses. When the speaker says, “He blamed the government, but / his thoughts were persistent,“ we can admire the savvy line-break, but that is not enough to rescue “The Sunken Dream.”

There are other winners, of course. One of those others is “November Nights,” the most sensuous of the lot. It doesn’t strive; it begins gently:

I find your face
on a pillow of leaves,
lately adrift.

One knows that the speaker must go down to the pillow, that the leaves “lately adrift” are gathered meaningfully in one place now, a place for love and rest and listening. Greinke is a listener.




****Marcia Ross, author of the novel Layla and the Lake (Pelekinesis, 2019)

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