Saturday, March 25, 2017
Friday, March 24, 2017
Message from the Memoirist Poems by Paul Pines
Paul Pines |
Message from the Memoirist
Poems
by Paul Pines
Art
by Marc Shanker
Dos
Madres Press
Loveland,
Ohio
ISBN:
978-1-939929-28-0
135
Pages
Review
by Dennis Daly
Tick
Tock Tick Tock. Hickory, Dickory, Dock…. The various concepts of scientific
time tell us almost nothing with their deconstructing conundrums. Nursey Rhymes
do conjure up a sense of play and curiosity but then abandon us to the
immediate. Only when time intersects with the eternal or the pinned-down specific
does meaning appear, gleaned from the residue of the fiery crossover or the accelerated
collision. Paul Pines, in his wonderfully illustrated poetry collection
entitled Message From the Memoirist, uncovers precious pieces of memory from
the dreamscape of mind and transmutes these quark-like particles into summonses
that evoke the true nature of fundamental things. The spectacle or rather
spectral results can be unsettling. Or exhilarating. Even funny.
In
tracing his expansive memories back to the “time before thought” Pines,
presumably dressed in a cowl and carrying a torch, leads us through a
primordial darkness. Shades appear and vanish from our reach. A cock crows and dawn’s
light drenches with creation all who have passed over the River Lethe again.
Early
in the collection, in his piece entitled Toward the Creation of a Perfect
Science, Pines considers the importance of memory to the present, as well as
the positive attributes and the capacity for natural healing that society also
assigns to forgetfulness. The poet puts it this way,
One
forgets and then
When
one remembers
It
seems so important
Not
to forget again
I
want to say that
Forgetting
is a merciful act
But
when what is called
Feels
essential to being
Who
one is in the present
I
am not sure
We
all live through what
we
see and don’t see
When
older people lose a lot of weight, one of two things could be happening. Pines
dwells on the positive in his poetic meditation entitled Yesterday’s
Conversation. As time speeds up and the present merges into memory and
archetypal moments the poet’s response becomes more and more physical. I
sympathize. We’ve done this before. We can beat this. Consider these lines,
I see myself shrinking
Not like an old man
but
slipping back into the young one
who
ran through Coles Woods
the
day after his wedding
and
think,
“You may be in denial,
but look at you go!”
I
will once again lift weights
put
on a glove to field grounders
observe
overweight guys
on
the basketball court at the Y
and
scream,
“I can run rings around these suckers!
In
the end
I
want to laugh all the way
to
where ever it is
we’re
going
A
Message from the Memoirist, Pines’ title poem, begins as a narrative with the poet’s
persona reviewing the efficaciousness of a soon-to-be-given lecture on memoir
writing in the early morning hours. Evolving into natural imagery until a
central, a core template seems to emerge. The piece introduces a subconscious nesting of
fractals. Here is the conclusion that doubles as a beginning,
… what’s re/membered
is made whole
patterns
from which
all
patterns
are
born
the field
in which we
are embedded
embedded
in
us
the
Genius
who
begins to whisper in our ear as soon as our lips
touch
Lethe
and we drop
screaming
into the
world
If
we are not looking in the right direction our creative function from the “fields
before thought” might enter our souls in such a way that the end result
resembles possession, demonic or otherwise. One recognizes this possession
immediately because of its referential patterns. The patterns complement what
we already know. In his poem entitled The Field Theory According to Mel Blank
Pines alerts us to the deep comedy hidden our origins. He uses Mel Blank, the
legendary voice of cartoon characters Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Porky Pig. The poet spins possession into a telling
vignette at the end of the piece’s first section. Mel Blank’s son recalls,
a
moment after
an
auto accident
and
two weeks
in
a hospital bed
he
remained
unresponsive
until
a neurologist
asked
him, How
you feeling Bugs?
and
Mel answered
What’s
up Doc?
Ties
between the world of forms and human kind are many. Symbolism plays its part.
Pathos too. Toward the end of the book Pines places a prose poem entitled
Remembering the Memoirist. He raises a lantern on the psychology of time and
emotions embedded in that concept. The poet relates a narrative fragment that
illuminates the beginnings of a creative life,
…Fifty
years ago,
grieving
my father’s death, I listened for messages to quiet
the
explosive anger and desperation of a boy who found
himself
homeless. In a tenement on 9th St. & Ave. B on a
winter’s
day sans heat or hot water, maybe a few chicken-
hearts
in the fridge, I sat with a Ouija board on my knees.
The
furnace in the tenement basement, like the one in my
heart,
no longer burned. The hood of my sweatshirt cover-
ing
my head, I cried out to whatever voice might rise from
the
cave within. Scared of what the future held, I framed
the
question: What will become of me?
Many
years ago Wolfgang Pauli, the famous physicist and pioneer of Quantum Theory had
a vision of The World Clock, a contraption of wheels and pendulums supported by
a large black bird and emitting pulses. The experience gave Pauli a deeper
understanding of his scientific work and a psychological feeling of well-being.
Pines
references this World Clock in his poetics and Marc Shanker interprets it in
his accompanying illustrations. As the reader pages through Pines’ provocative collection,
led by his young persona in a hooded sweatshirt (no cowl
this time) illuminating the awful truth, it strikes one that these pieces and
their intersecting memories make up a clock not unlike Pauli’s. Pines’ poem Epitaph
for Icarus III has this passage,
a
dust mote
his
presence
fills
the space
between
sleeping
and
waking
spirals
through
Time-
out-of-mind
to
land softly
re/minds
me
to
listen for
what
follows
Remember
to take the time (steal it if necessary), let this book unfold, and soak in the
compelling and quantum landscapes of master poet Paul Pines.
Thursday, March 23, 2017
Doug Holder interviews poet David Blair
We start out talking about his new collection of poetry Arsonville. David Blair grew up in Pittsburgh. He is the author of three books of poetry, Ascension Days, which was chosen by Thomas Lux for the Del Sol Poetry Prize, Arsonville, and Friends with Dogs. His poems have appeared in Boston Review, Ploughshares, Slate Magazine, and many other places as well, including the anthologies, The Best of Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, Devouring the Green, and Zoland Poetry.
He has taught at the New England Institute of Art and in the M.FA. Writing Program at the University of New Hampshire. He lives in Somerville, Massachusetts, with his wife and daughter, and he has a degree in philosophy from Fordham University and an M.F.A. in creative writing from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Holder interviewed Blair on his Poet to Poet/Writer to Writer program on Somerville Community Access TV
He has taught at the New England Institute of Art and in the M.FA. Writing Program at the University of New Hampshire. He lives in Somerville, Massachusetts, with his wife and daughter, and he has a degree in philosophy from Fordham University and an M.F.A. in creative writing from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Holder interviewed Blair on his Poet to Poet/Writer to Writer program on Somerville Community Access TV
“Elemental: A Dissection of Parts” by Ivy Page Review by Timothy Gager
“Elemental: A Dissection of Parts” by Ivy Page
Review
by Timothy Gager
Paperback: 68 pages
Publisher: Salmon Poetry
ISBN-10: 1910669261
ISBN-13: 978-1910669266
While reading through “Elemental: A Dissection of Parts” by
Ivy Page, I was struck not only by the metaphor of the building blocks of the
human psyche, but the ability of the poet to place me on the outside looking
in, and on the inside looking out. The book is divided into four sections: F i r e, Air Child, Dark Water and Earth Eater, all classical elements in
popular culture. Within the basic building blocks of these, Page explores
growing from child to adult, finding love, having a child but also our fragile
existence—our own building blocks of life, growth, losses and death. All of
these existing simultaneously at all times for us, leaving it up to the
individual to pick through these elements.
Ivy Page defines her poems within our senses, both from the
again from the inside and the outside of the narrator. It’s personal, private
but also can be distant---as if to say, don’t get too close, be amazing but
still stay detached when necessary. We, as humans, have the ability to protect
ourselves, process our instincts and create what we can be safe with in our
world. Page does this admirably, drawing us in, and pushing us away, when required.
We become intimate with the poet, the subject, the time and place---but we are
reminded that we also fear this exposure.
In the poem, Just in
Case, Page summarizes
I
didn’t tell you, when I woke-up this morning
that
your wordless face left me wanting more
song
in the world, and that the way
you
had discarded the sheets and exposed your
bare
body made me linger as I put on my clothes.
Even the day to day rat race can be
solved by words, within art. This is brought out in, On A Dusty Shelf in the Corner
The working mothers are tired,
and the working fathers are looking
for their epic to be written on Wall
Street,
not between the pages of this book
Come in and hide with me.
Then
on the very next page, in Spine, Page
writes personally, to ease oneself open, “above two half-length pieces”—written
about both opening a book, but indeed opening oneself up emotionally and also leaving
oneself open by exposing one’s words to the world. Quite complex, this
trifecta, if the reader, as a reader should, decides to go all the way in. Page
does it with words of lips, tongues, taste, touch---all exposed within the
pages of “Elemental: A Dissection of Parts”.
In the
section Air Child, Page again
explores the fragility of being, and how much we need words in times like
these:
Nothing seems right
My fingers feel fat
my hair greasy.
I long to find a way to the place
where creativity can let the sun set
in the upper left hand corner of the page
and magic will happen.
The fourth
section, Dark Water, is the most
playful of the four. Again, the reader is dared to go deeper than meets the
eye. The musical poem Coal Train,
engages the reader with terms from music, but alas, John Coltrain—is the
homonym. In Ode to a Vein, Page opens
with, “Like a trampoline I bounce fingers across skin to find your rivers laid
deep, down below.” Here I found, a play on, love in vane (vein), but was there
intent? I would like to think so, because what we uncover within ourselves,
within this poem, is sheer brilliance. Again, it’s the outside looking into the
inside looking out.
In ‘Ol Woman, Page gives us play with in
dialect. In A Ride with Milton and Jonson,
you are a passenger being driven by references to and by the playwrights and
poets, John and Ben. The section finishes with Call --- I Will Answer, allowing the books familiar themes to explode
once more.
it will get better
how you used to think I was amazing
just hand in there,
I pretend to be a little case on the
outside,
hard
The
book ends with the section, Earth Eater,
which doesn’t summarize the book but rather takes us to additional places. The
poem “Broken” stands out to me, as an
affair has occurred, and though it was described as just something which
happened with a friend, the broken is not the relationship, but rather the now
broken inner safety of the narrator, as the poem concludes:
Echo of who I used to be resonated
like an empty drum against your ears---
I let myself slip
into loving you and
hating myself.
Thus,“Elemental:
A Dissection of Parts,” by Ivy Page leaves me blessed with the largeness and
the smallness of the world, with all the pieces and the individuality of each and
every piece. It is the way life is observed by the observer and by all of us—pulled
in and pushed back.
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
“Questions for a Poet” Interview with Kevin Gallagher author of LOOM."
Kevin Gallagher |
“Questions
for a Poet” Interview with Kevin Gallagher author of LOOM.
Interview conducted by Mikayla Brasefield
In a small corner of the writing world, poetry exists as the
beating heart of literature. It has existed for many centuries in numerous
parts of the world - from the Sumerian Epic
of Gilgamesh to the Japanese “haiku”. Poetry has inspired many, and has
been inspired by the events of the world and their effects on humanity. On
blustery March 2nd, a poet by the name of Kevin Gallagher visited Endicott
College to speak to the young poetry community about his recent poetry book
entitled Loom. It holds the truths
about the connections between Northern capitalists and Southern slavers
during the days of civil injustice and prejudice against the blacks.
Brilliantly written in such a way as to merely hint at the novel behind his
words, Gallagher sheds new light on a part of American history that most of
America had previously tried to remain ignorant of. But what makes the poet,
the poet you might ask? In this short, yet enlightening interview, I was able
to discover a bit more about the “man behind the curtain” as it were.
1.
Your passion for Loom's overarching theme is apparent in your poems. What was
your drive going into such a controversial topic?
Well,
the race relations in the US have become quite heated. I was living in Washington DC for a year and
two things happened. First, my son was in school and getting a very different
picture of the Civil War. Second, the
Freddy Gray murder happened in Baltimore.
Rather than going at it face first, I took the path of Seamus Heaney,
Charles Olson, Muriel Rukeyser and others—and dealt with the present as an
artist by confronting our past.
2.
In an article from masspoetry.org you talk a little bit about how lyric
poetry hits you and in the next moment, disappears. Do you carry a poetry
journal with you to write down fragments of poems as they come?
Sometimes. Or, backs of envelopes and so forth. I live a hectic life now with kids and a
demanding job. More often than not the
lyric poems disappear before any of it gets on paper. That is why the narrative project has become
good for me at this point in my life.
When I have time I can sit down and 'pick up the story.'
3.
Various articles have mentioned a few of your favorite poets as Walt Whitman,
Fanny Howe, and Kenneth Rexroth - whom your dog is named after I noticed. What
did you find about their works that drew you in so much?
Purity. Empathy.
The struggle to make sense of the US and be an American at the same
time. Rexroth to me is the best—so many
wide ranging poems. And, whenever I feel
really harried, I go to his nature poems and to the Sierras.
4.
Do you ever have writer's block? (If so, do you ever give yourself little
poetry prompts? If you do, what are some of them you find useful?)
I'm
older now and realize that if you are truly a poet you are always one. So, sometimes poems fly out of you on a daily
basis, sometimes nothing happens for months.
After seeing that happen for the past thirty years I never let a dry
spell get to me. If I ever feel like it
is too distant I find a new poet to read or go back to my favorites.
5.
You are a professor, dad, husband, and poet. How do you manage balance?
I
have a full life, and it makes for good poetry.
6.
What advice would you give to young, aspiring poets?
Read and memorize lots
of poetry. Live a full life. At some point full poems come.
If you’d like to learn
more about the amazing “artist of words”, hear more from his works, or find out
about his newest poetry book “Loom”,
you can find him on the following interweb sources:
http://madhat-press.com/products/loom-by-kevin-gallagher
Mikayla Rose Brasefield (19) is a sophomore Nursing major from Vernon, CT, with a previous history in Creative Writing. She was featured in her high school’s student-written and published magazine, titled War & Pieces (2015), was awarded an honorable mention in the Nancy Thorpe Poetry Contest (2014), and has won several silver medals and a gold medal for some of her poetry/writings in the annual Scholastic Art & Writing Contest.
Mikayla Rose Brasefield (19) is a sophomore Nursing major from Vernon, CT, with a previous history in Creative Writing. She was featured in her high school’s student-written and published magazine, titled War & Pieces (2015), was awarded an honorable mention in the Nancy Thorpe Poetry Contest (2014), and has won several silver medals and a gold medal for some of her poetry/writings in the annual Scholastic Art & Writing Contest.
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