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Saturday, March 11, 2017

The Sunday Poet: Kate Hanson Foster


Kate Hanson Foster

 Kate Hanson Foster's first book of poems, Mid Drift, was published by Loom Press and was selected by Massachusetts Center for the Book as a "Must Read" in 2011. She gained her MFA from Bennington College, and her poetry has appeared in Comstock Review, Harpur Palate, Poet Lore and elsewhere. She lives and writes in Groton, Massachusetts.




The First Gunshot

The first gunshot is not a gun—
It is a child playing with bubble wrap,
and small innocuous feet need the weight
of a whole body for a single, satisfying pop.
The first gunshot is a smile. A laugh. A fool
lit a firecracker in the hallway and someone
is going to ring their neck. There is no puzzle
in the echo—it is the muffled bone-snap
of a branch outside. The backfire of an old truck
turning the corner. The first gunshot is one
last pure breath, and the peace in the peak
of it. An unexpected flower in full vivacious
bloom. Not the start of something. A finger.
A trigger. A round. Not the first cave hollowing
within a body. Not a body hitting the floor
thinking how can I look dead enough—eyes
open or shut. Not run like a deer to the nearest
exit. Not resolving one’s body as a shield to cover
a lover, a friend, a child. The first gunshot
is a cloister of joy. A sweet stillness, so alive,
so subsistent after a burst of a big bright balloon.
No fear. No fight. No flight into action because
it’s not going to happen. Not to you. Not today.

Wednesday, March 08, 2017

From the Other Room by Anna M. Warrock (Slate Roof 2017)



 


From the Other Room by Anna M. Warrock (Slate Roof 2017)

Review by Doug Holder
'
The first thing I noticed about Somerville, Mass. Poet Anna. M. Warrock's new collection of poetry “From the Other Room,” was the physical book itself. Usually I merely glance at a book cover, but this was like love at first sight; I stopped to admire its simple beauty, The craftsmanship was at such a level, that it reminded of the many finely crafted books put out by Gary Metras' Adastra Press that-- like Slate Roof-- is located in Western, Massachusetts. Slate Roof is a small, collaborative press that published art-quality poetry books—the poetry that is between the covers in this case is more than worthy of its design.

I am in my early sixties so I can easily identify with what Warrock writes about. As the acclaimed poet Martin Espada opined, “Warrock speaks the the language of grief with eloquence and courage. She understands that experience of death changes the experience of life.” It usually takes someone with a little mileage to crack this nut open to the readers.

In her poem “Spring's Lament” the poet looks at a greening April tree, and sees the dark shadows below the nascent leaves. She understand how life and death are close dance partners, and indeed there may be a welcoming balm, and some forgiveness under Spring's incessant bloom,

So a tree turns green and green and green.
Then there's the shade.

I will not let go of that, the shadow under the tree,
dark, deep and forgiving.

Forgiven. That's what I mean, forgiven. (2)

Warrock captures a strikingly beautiful moment in the poem “Looking into her Death.” This is when a young girl ( Warrock—I assume) looks into her mother's hidden cupboard, and sees the luminous glasses on the shelf in a lineup of sorrow, waiting to be poured, to forestall their own demise—a perfect metaphor of absence-- for loss—for death...


… The glasses, stacked neatly,
become luminous on the shelves.
By opening the door, I shed light
on their curves, their brittleness.
They are so clear I can see the dust
caught on their transparent sides. Standing there, I realize they are waiting.
The glasses do not know my mother
is dead, so they wait for hands
to take them down, fill them with
beer or juice or milk. Then
her hands will wash them,
her hands will put them away.
“ She is dead,” I say softly, “she is dead.”

Warrock has long been on the Boston are poetry scene. Her poems have appeared in the Harvard Review, The Madison Review and elsewhere. Her poems have been  performed at the Boston Hayden Planetarium, and permanently installed in a Boston area subway station. The reader gets the whole package here, the beautiful physical book and the poems(to use a cliché)...at times left me breathless.

Monday, March 06, 2017

INTERVIEW WITH CLARE L. MARTIN with Susan Tepper






INTERVIEW WITH CLARE L. MARTIN
 with Susan Tepper

Clare L. Martin’s second collection of poetry, Seek the Holy Dark, is the 2017 selection of the Louisiana Cajun and Creole Series by Yellow Flag Press. Her acclaimed debut collection of poetry, Eating the Heart First, was published by Press 53. Martin’s poetry has appeared in Thrush Poetry Journal, Melusine, Poets and Artists, and Louisiana Literature, among others. She founded and edits MockingHeart Review.


SUSAN TEPPER: ‘Seek the Holy Dark’ is an enticing title for a book of poems. What do these words mean to you?

CLARE L. MARTIN: The title of the book comes from the poem of the same title. I must go to it to explain what it means to me. In the poem, “Seek the Holy Dark,” there are supernatural beings—whether they are angels or demons, or something entirely different, I do not know. These beings exist alongside humans. The beings speak in the poem. Their speech in the poem is prophetic. The title “Seek the Holy Dark” is an imperative plea to acknowledge the darker aspects of existence in the spiritual journey. We uncover and discover through darkness to light. I suppose I am urging the reader to go with me into these dark places to find illumination and enlightenment for themselves. I also have tried to tap into that prophetic voice for many of the poems. Sometimes prophecy can be very mundane. My hope is that the language that I use rises to a level so that what is ineffable can be intimated. This ties into the declaration to “seek the holy dark” that enfolds the entirety of the poems.

ST: Though this is not a typical collection of love poems, your poems are inclusively about love in all its myriad forms.

CLM: In my belief system, God is love. So, spiritually, I want to aspire to my “godself” and be love. I believe Love energy permeates the universe, and is both the Infinite and the infinitesimal. Many of these poems are in pursuit of godliness and/ or are love poems to humanity. Even though I write about God, this book is not religious in any way. I think this will be obvious to any reader. Some might call these poems heretical or sacrilegious but I would protest those characterizations. I take readers to the very edge with me, and we come back from the poetic experiences wiser and stronger. I hope that doesn’t sound boastful. I mean it sincerely.

In the poems that are more typical “love poems,” I express with abandon myriad passions. The erotic or love poems are dangerous for me. They may not seem as daring as some poets have been able to express, but for me they are risking a great deal. If I cannot risk it in life, I will risk it on the page.
I also feel that the poems that are the most sensual express a womanliness that I have grown into. It has something to do with my mother’s death. Many of these poems were written after her death. I was both in mourning for her and in a sense freed as well when writing these poems. She was proud of me and loved me and I loved her, but I do not believe she would have approved of this book. I wrote it anyway. I had to. I do not mean that in a callous way. The unwritten words would have consumed me. This book is an exclamation of my personal womanhood and adulthood.

ST: Your poems deal with the displaced and disenfranchised people of the world and how they are inter-connected to the luckier people. Yet I would not categorize you as a protest poet. At least not in the traditional sense. In your poem BODY you write:
I am a million bodies / laid upon each other / a million bodies in a mass grave / …”

CLM: This poem came to me through viewing the shore at Dingle, Ireland as photographed by Myriam Jégat. I saw the stones as bodies and the imagery came from there. There is a fury in this poem that outpaces the language. I hope the reader senses this. My protest is against hatred, egoism, injustice, and malignancies of human character. I put my life on the line in each poem. I hope that comes through for the reader.

SFT: One of my many favorites in this collection you have titled “Woman in Prayer.” It seems to be a poem of repentance, though I’m not quite certain of that. What can you tell us about this poem that begins:
I am penitent; / poured on rail of the pew / somber Mary alit, / red-glassed candles / no smoke, but a hint / of myrrh…/”

CLM: This poem is a personal excoriation because of my own (at-the-time) perceived spiritual failings. I was raised Roman Catholic and left the Church at thirteen, before my Confirmation. I am a believer in God, but all my life I have been told I am doing it wrong because I don’t attend Mass and follow the Catholic Church’s teachings. I do, however, enter Catholic church buildings often for prayer and mystical solitude.

This poem is nearly the exact truth of an event. It occurred at St Anne’s Catholic Church in the city I live in. The poem was written shortly after I left St. Anne’s building. I suppose the overwrought contrition I felt expanded to many things in my life that I perceived as wrongdoings. I will likely never be free of “feeling guilty,” because of my upbringing. But, I am on a path of reclamation of my own sense of wholeness and inner peace. The book itself is a declaration of that purpose.
Thank you, Susan, for your thoughtful and thought-provoking questions and for caring enough about Seek the Holy Dark to ask them.






 Susan Tepper, an award-winning writer, has been at it for twenty years. Six books of her fiction and poetry have been published, with a seventh book, a novella, forthcoming in the fall of 2017. FIZZ her reading series at KGB Bar, NYC, is sporadically ongoing these past nine years. www.susantepper.com