I Forgot Light
Burns
By Eileen R.
Tabios
Copyright 2015 by
Eileen R. Tabios
Moria Books
Munster, NY
ISBN-13: 978-0-96473912121-3-2
Softbound, 56
pages, $16
Review by Zvi A.
Sesling
In much the same way as some scientists are developing artificial intelligence,
robots and the future, Eileen R. Tabios brings us to the future with her new
book I Forgot Light Burns.
In the publicity piece enclosed with the book there are quotes from her
Afterword in which Ms. Tabios states, “My recent work, ‘Murder, Death and
Resurrection’ (MDR) includes an MDR Poetry Generator that brings together much
of my poetics and poet tics. The MDR
Poetry Generator contains a data base of 1,146 lines which can be combined
randomly to make a large number of poems; the shortest would be a couplet and
longest would be a poem of 1,146 lines…”
“The MDR Poetry Generator’s conceit is that any combination of its 1,146
lines succeed in creating a poem. Thus,
I can create—generate—new poems unthinkingly from its database.”
Create poetry unthinkingly? Is that
poetry? I had always thought one must
think in order to write (create) poetry.
Cogito Ergo Sum. However, she
notes, “Yet while the MDR Poetry Generator presents poems not generated through
conscious personal preferences, the results are not distanced from the
author: I created the 1,1146 lines from
reading through 27 previously-published poetry collections…these new poems
nonetheless contain all the personal involvement—and love!—that went into the
writing of its lines. The results
dislocate without eliminating authorship.”
So, while some poets may find it easier, if they have the Tabios MDR Poetry
Generator and take the time to enter 1,146 (or more or less?) lines, I am sure
her efforts are not an overnight creation, but a long creative process
culminating in this inspirational invention.
Here are some poems from this fascinating book, which only expand Ms.
Tabios’s reputation as one of the most creative abstract poets in the country:
I forgot I was a connoisseur of alleys—
I forgot the glint from the fang of a wild boar as
he lurked behind shadows in a land where it
only takes one domino to fall—
I forgot how quickly civilization can disappear,
as swiftly as the shoreline from an oil spill
birthed from a twist of the wrist by a drunk
vomiting over the helm—
I forgot grabbing at my fading dreams only to
recall a vision of skyscrapers crumbling from
the slaps of iron
balls—
However it works,
the Poetry Generator generated an exciting poem that made me want to read
on. The next one that “grabbed” me was:
I forgot the
light burned and we never shared
our eyes—
This simple poem I read three or four times to fully absorb it from
different perspectives and ended up wishing I had thought of that line.
I don’t remember any titles on these interesting poems. However, many of the poems are worth
remembering. Take for example the following poem, or is three separate poems?
I forgot memory contains an underbrush—
I forgot the inevitability of ashes—
I forgot sentences like veins—
The final example in this book I will use is one that while it takes place
in her native Philippines, could be in any city on any continent and holds
truths to which many of us a blind.
I forgot I saw a city bleeding beyond the
window and felt Manila’s infamously red sunset
staining street children whose hopes
concerned absolutely no one—
After reading the publicity piece which is extracted from the Afterword, I
find myself enthralled with the poetic creations in this volume of poetry. The result I am sure is that this is poetry –
all of it worth reading. It would be interesting to see the next volume created
by the MDR Poetry Generator. Yet I hope
Ms. Tabios, who is light years ahead of 99.99% of poets, does not share her
auto-generating poetic system and allows us mere mortals to continue serving up
our own poetry. At the same time we are
seeing the poetry of the 21st century and beyond; for once begun, it
can only move forward, which makes this
book a must for the creative mind.
______________________________________________________________________
Zvi A. Sesling is
author of King of the Jungle
(Ibbetson Street, 2010), Across Stones of
Bad Dreams (Cervena Barva, 2011) and
the soon to be published Fire Tongue
(Cervena Barva). He is Editor of Muddy River
Poetry Review, Publishes Muddy River Books and edited Bagel Bards Anthologies #7 and #8.
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