Swimming In A Southern Reservoir
            by Laverne
Firth
www.finishinglinepress.com $12
www.finishinglinepress.com $12
Review by Alice Weiss 
            As a reader
who spent half her adult life in Louisiana,
Laverne Firth’s poems were a call to homesickness and desire.  The poet cast me back to tender awful
moments, for example, suffering through 
the “Southern Summer,”  
                        our
stickiness
                        carried
over into humid nights. . .
                        we
crossed our fingers
                        wished
. . .that quickly
                        time
would claim the season.
or in “The Fill of Summer,” “rustlings in the grass, and the
havey breathing/ we always take for granted.”
The poems evoke the simple 
tropes of Southern rural experience, porches, circling chicken hawks,
singing through rows of cotton, but they also 
rise past the conventions of Southern writing because
they are populated with family, growing boys, Deacons, and
singers.  Of aunts on the porch (I count
five in the poem),” Distances,” Aunts seem to crowd on a porch. The poem is
structured  according to their birth
order.  The youngest, who speaks of men,
the two oldest who do not, and “Two aunts sandwiched in between/start an
argument.  A frog is heard,/ loud,
near.”  A speaker,a little boy is
listening and doesn’t quite get what’s going on . . .”Things become complex.”  It is a poem where the title seems to pinch
all our perceptions with irony of the distances living close creates.  
            Further, I
find the In addition, Firth manages to portray the  struggles 
Black families endure in the context of institutional racism with
amazing grace.  In the voice of mourners
at the funeral of  a woman in “Everybody
Was Impressed,”
            She must
have been happy  how could she
            have not
been so after nine birthings, sixty years
            of heavy
domestic service, most of it in the best
            of homes,
and in “From the Time I was Born” singing through the
wounds, and miseries,
             for my chance to breathe. . .
            My
grandmother sang and sang and sang
            through the
rows of cotton, through the
            two hundred
pounds she would pick in one day.
We are conviced that “From the time that [he} was born, [he]
knew singing.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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