Wednesday, August 21, 2019
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Curious Peach by Denise Provost
Curious Peach by Denise Provost ( Ibbetson Street Press)
Review by Robert Cable
These poems reward our senses of sight, hearing, smell and taste! The poet observes that “ordinary seeing makes us blind.” She herself, however, has cultivated particularly keen perceptions, which she shares in these colorful, musical, fragrant, tasty poems. A winner in the Maria C. Faust Sonnet Contest, Provost’s poems tend to be of 14 lines, more or less. They are short and sweet, as is the poet herself. (Last night I had a front row seat at her public reading.) A few longer poems also tell interesting stories.
Are you curious about the title of this book? The phrase comes from a 17th C. poem by Andrew Marvell, when "curious" meant “interesting because of novelty or rarity” rather than "eager to acquire information or knowledge," as it does today. "Curious Peach" is also the title of Provost’s concluding verse, where it refers to consciousness of the fruit, which the poet imagines.
Denise Provost grew up in Maine, studied in Vermont (where Marvell was her favorite poet at Bennington College) and now lives in Massachusetts. She is intimately familiar with rural nature and with urban gardens. In addition to being a poet, she is an attorney, housewife, mother of three; and for the past two decades she has also served as a city alderman and then as a state legislator.
This chapbook provides a virtual poetic calendar or "declension of the year,” naming or describing a month, a season, a solstice or an equinox in most of the poems: "fledgling time of year," "the tender season," "that shadow, Autumn" "September's sharpening cold," "the Harvest's gaudy show," "winter's monochrome.” It also describes times of the day: "pre-dawn greyness," "sunrise pinks," "fresh-peeled day," "lovely day, so warm at its height," "colors grown dull/ when the sun slipped and fell," "deepening dark," "evening shroud," "dazzling day, then swift, seamless dark."
Provost’s poems are filled with specific flowers, fruits, trees and animals: bearded iris, bees, Bradford pear, cardinal, cat, chicadee, chicory, cicadas, cornstalks, daffodils, finches, forsythia, grapes, juncos, leopard frogs, lichens, lilacs, lindens, maples, "mere grass," milkweed, mockingbird, moss, mountain ash, mulberry trees, peach tree, peonies, pumpkin vine, Quaker Ladies, quince, rabbits, raspberries, red-winged blackbirds, robins, runner beans, skunk cabbages, sparrows, spring peepers, strawberries, sumac, tulips, water chestnuts, "noxious weeds," wild aster, wild rose, willows. Whew! The poet is steeped in nature; and we can share it through her words.
In two poems, the poet voices apprehension about the unnaturally changing natural world of our time. "Unseasonable" mentions "a world whose thermostat has gone awry." “Lament from a Wingless Thing” (the poet herself) voices the classical theme of Ubi sunt?: "Where are the birds/ of years gone by?/ To which rich banquet/ did they fly?" If we want to continue enjoying the wonderful nature described in these poems, we should seriously consider the question.
The cost of this delightful volume of 28 poems is $0.36 per verse; but its value is immeasurably higher. You will like it.
On page 28 there is a single typo: "juncos" not "junkos." (Ten cents discount.)
To order go to Curious Peach
Sunday, August 18, 2019
The Devil Who Raised Me By Robert Cooperman
The
Devil Who Raised Me
By
Robert Cooperman
Lithic
Press
ISBN:
978-1946-583116
104
Pages
Review
by Dennis Daly
If you like old
fashioned western stories, where hard scrabbled virtues and youthful
spirit go unrewarded and tragedy begets more tragedy, you’ll love
Richard Cooperman’s The Devil Who Raised Me. Cooperman’s
fictional antihero, John Sprockett, brought up by a doting mother and
Jesus-loving hypocrite father, devolves from childhood innocence into
a stone cold killer in antebellum Missouri. Along the way Cooperman
breathes vitality into a cast of larger-than-life characters, some of
whom abet evil, some who cherish goodness, and some who do both.
Cooperman
conveys his story through colloquial verse. The episodic poems center
intensity on individuals or actions and then gallop at breakneck
speed to the next tale. Each character is thickly lined, so thickly
lined in the way of cartoons or myths that the reader must choose his
or her path of perception. Myth wins out. Cooperman’s dramatis
personae rise to lofty and detailed heights or fall to nightmarish
destruction.
Schooled
by his mother in poetry, protagonist and future bad man John
Sprockett courts Sarah, his true love, despite parental ignorance and
cultural bigotry. Here, in Cooperman’s piece entitled John
Sprockett, Seventeen, in Love, Sarah’s father speaks his mind and
John envisions escape in a Romeo and Juliet redo,
“I
blame those poems
your
Ma filled your head with!”
Mr.
Gilchrist declared:
“Shall
I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day
dirty
as French postcards,”
though
Sarah smiled, took my hand,
and
kissed me, each time I recited it;
her
knowing one feller, at least,
who’d
stay true-in-love with her forever.
Still,
a plan’s drumming in my head
like
a fine horse rode fast and hard
over
baked-dry prairie.
“Satan’s
work!” Pa would’ve sworn,
had
he known. A good thing
he
don’t suspect a thing.
One
of the more complicated of Cooperman’s characters is Joseph Hawk
Wing, a Kiowa and the tracker for the Sheriff’s posse that chases
Sprockett and company on two different but continuous occasions. He
nurses his own racial resentments and has come to a different
conclusion on who the good guys and who the bad guys are. In the poem
The Tracker Joseph Hawk Wing, Hawk Wing deliberates and comes up with
an initial plan during the first chase thusly,
I’d
have left this posse in circles
and
when bedded down,
slit
their throats, scalped them,
and
helped Sarah and John find
a
safe place in the wilderness,
or
pointed them toward some city
where
folks won’t root around
in
their love business.
But
I’m just white enough
to
believe in the sanctity
of
contracts and business deals:
well-paid
by Henry Gilchrist,
I’ll
find young Sprockett
and
while Henry or the Sheriff
tosses
a rope over a tree limb,
I’ll
press knees to my mount’s withers
Before
the killing starts.
One
rhythmical action follows another in quick succession in Cooperman’s
verse. Even the protagonist’s internal thoughts spin from scenario
to scenario, expanding our understanding of the character. After his
getaway, in a piece entitled John Sprockett Escapes, Sprockett
considers a bleak future,
… slung
low in the saddle,
lead
hornets buzzing past my head:
one
nicked poor Mrs. Lydia Smith,
howling
whilst I slapped leather,
to
pay Ma and Neddie a last visit,
tell
‘em we’d meet in Heaven, though
I
fear I’m heading down the hot chute,
knowing
if they send the tracker after me,
my
only chance is to kill him:
no
one else can pick out my trail
like
it was clear as a page of poetry.
Saddens
me: I’ve sunk so low,
preparing
to murder a man,
just
for doing his honest job.
Unusually
in a story like this, Cooperman gives voice to the collateral damage
inflicted by the combatants—both good and bad. In the poem Mrs.
Millicent Gilchrist, Hearing of Her Husband Henry’s Death, Mrs.
Gilchrist bemoans her own fate this way,
You’ve
gotten yourself killed, Henry,
on
this manhunt I warned was doomed
when
Young Sprockett escaped, first time.
You’d’ve
given our darling daughter
to
the banker’s rapscallion son;
I’d
not let him near a mangy cur,
let
alone our Sarah. Well, he’s dead too,
and
good riddance to the vermin.
Young
Sprockett rounded on your posse
like
a grizzly. For that, I hate him
almost
as much as I do you, Henry,
getting
yourself killed, leaving me to mourn.
Cooperman
even fleshes out an oracle in the guise of a local midwife to issue
cautions to the rather ignorant menfolk running the show. In the
piece The Midwife, Hannah Macalester, Months After the Sheriff
Returns Alone, Macalester speaks as follows,
…the
Tracker and Sheriff
the
only two to escape, and Sheriff wounded
so
bad, he still ain’t fit to protect this town.
“Leave
that boy be, or he might kill
the
whole state,” I’d warned him and Gilchrist.
“Him
and Sarah just dumb kids in love,
running
off the best idea since canned peaches,”
but
men never listen to sense, especially
from
a woman they scoff is demon touched.
Like
the fictionalized outlaw supermen Billy the Kid and Jesse James,
Cooperman’s John Sprockett provides the antidote to this iniquitous
age of class-governed legal systems and mythic neediness. Applause to
Cooperman. Long live the cowboy anti-heroes, and their attendant
legends.
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