by Murray Shugars
Copyright 2013 by Dos
Madres Press inc.
Dos Madres Press
Loveland OH 45140
Softbound, 57 pages,
no price
ISBN 978-1-933675-90-9
Review by Zvi A. Sesling
Murray Shugars presents
us with his songs of the south – dogwood, Mississippi heat,
mockingbirds. But we also get a bit of Michigan and “Big Lake,”
Ravenna and a taste of New Orleans jazz. We also learn Shugars’
version of history: Christopher Marlow shot by a jealous husband in
an SUV, some bossa nova poetry that leaves a smile and on and on.
There are poems utilizing various devices such as with humor or
seriousness or both make his point.
Take for example How To Kill
A Tree:
When you decide to fell
the dogwood behind the house,
do it quickly. Saw it at the
roots
and watch it fall
Don’t limb the
tree—dropping
first the dead branches, then
the dying—and let it stand
alone on that hill, a brare
trunk
with two raised arms
cut off at the elbows.
Don’t leave it there
naked in the Mississippi
heat,
saying one cool morning
you’ll finish the job.
Or try the poem The Eccentric
Motions Of The Bossa Nova
I found the five
unanswered equations of
Apollonius of Perga
scrawled on a blank page in
the dictionary of God
I found a formula
for the eccentric motions of
celestial lovers
and the unrequited desire of
planets.
I found the names of conic
sections,
the date of each birth
and death.
I found the tangents
and harmonic
divisions of the bossa nova.
I think Tom Jobim wrote those
notes.
In another poem, How To
Judge A Poet we learn different views of what it takes to write
verse:
When you meet a poet
outside G&L’s in
Muskegon, Michigan,
where all the poets eat
the best goddamn chilidogs
anyone has ever had,
Now, if you want to find out
how to judge a poet, better grab copy of this book and read the rest
of the poem.
Shugars has a way of making
his point. He is a different kind of poet, telling Federico Garcia
Lorca to come to Vicksburg and walk the National Military Park
together, or lump Plato and Ronald Reagan into one poem and in
another presents you his bucket list.
Murray Shugars is a
poet to savor, read slowly, more than once, sit back in that comfy
stuffed chair, then crack a thin smile.
_________________________________________________
Zvi A. Sesling
Reviewer, Boston
Area Small Press and Poetry Scene
Author, King
of the Jungle and Across
Stones of Bad Dreams
Editor, Muddy
River Poetry Review
Editor,
Bagel Bards Anthology 7
Editor,
Bagel Bards Anthology 8
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