Hoops Review By David Wojahn
History
shaping selves: four poets.
(Hoops)(Native Guard)(Salvation Blues: One Hundred Poems,
1985-2005)(Sugartown)(Book review). by
David Wojahn.
The
Southern Review 43.1
(Wntr 2007): p218(14).
Full
Text :COPYRIGHT 2007 Louisiana State University
IN
THE TITLE POEM of his late-in-life collection, History, Robert Lowell
writes that "History has to live with what was here--/clutching
and close to fumbling all we had." This famously visceral poet
refuses to make history an abstraction; it is an august but gangling
force, a kind of murky, debris- and detritus-laden river, flowing
relentlessly, and in its currents the public and the personal are
impossible to distinguish from one another. As Lowell insists in many
of his greatest poems--think of the embittered elegy for Colonel Shaw
and his black regiment in "For the Union Dead"--selves
write history, but history shapes selves in powerfully mysterious
ways. This is certainly not a fashionable contention, but I think it
is one shared by all of the four poets under discussion here. They
are not by any means Lowell's descendants, but they share with him a
desire to superimpose the historical upon the personal; and for them
the river of history is even more turbid than it was for the
aristocratic Lowell, involving above all matters of race and of
class, currents which Lowell with his patrician sense of entitlement
could not have so acutely identified. Natasha Trethewey and Major
Jackson are young African American poets concerned not so much with
problems of identity politics as with the challenge of forging an
authentic and personal voice in an era when definitions of African
American literary identity promise to be significantly reconfigured.
David Rivard and Rodney Jones, white male poets in midcareer, differ
from many of their generational counterparts in their willingness to
overtly acknowledge class as a force that still shapes our lives and
continues to foster injustice. The milieu of Trethewey and ]ones is
primarily the rural South, while for Rivard and Jackson it is the
urban Northeast. Trethewey and Jackson favor received forms, often
the more intricate varieties, while Jones and Rivard work primarily
in free verse--yet it is a tautly controlled and elegantly modulated
variety of free verse. However, for all their formal and thematic
differences, these four poets struggle with the same question that
animated Lowell--how does history "live with what was here"?
Natasha
Trethewey, in her third collection, offers the most programmatic
answer to this question, and it is one which preoccupied the writer
in her previous two volumes, Domestic Work (2001) and Bellocq's
Ophelia (2002). There are two notable strains in these collections.
One emphasizes the autobiographical lyric and seems little different
from the mainstream period style of contemporary poetry as it has
existed for the past thirty-odd years; this is not to dismiss her
writing in this mode, for much of it is rendered with considerable
facility, and it helps that Trethewey's personal history is an
interesting one. She is a Mississippian, born of a white father and
an African American mother in 1966, when miscegenation laws were
still in place. The legacy of a biracial heritage, coupled with the
impact of her parents' divorce when the poet was six, informs many of
her poems. Trethewey's other signature approach might be termed a
documentary one, making use of found materials, ekphrastic poems
about photographs, and historical monologues. Bellocq's Ophelia is a
book-length study of one of the Storyville District prostitutes
photographed by Bellocq in turn of the century New Orleans. The
protagonist is a composite of these women, really, and although the
portrait of Ophelia that the book renders is skillful, she remains
less a character than a type; ultimately this book seems a bit too
willful and static. Native Guard represents a considerable advance
for Trethewey, in no small measure because the volume manages to
entwine the personal and the documentary-historical elements of her
first two collections, giving the poems a new sort of urgency and
cohesion. And the poems are better written; the formal concision of
the earlier volumes, which at times seems merely dutiful, has been
replaced by a greater prosodic fluency, especially in the
collection's many sonnets, but also in highly demanding forms such as
the pantoum and ghazal. Her characteristic concerns now complement
one another, with the book's three sections moving seamlessly between
personal lyrics--many of them elegies for the poet's mother--and
historical meditations and monologues.
The
collection revolves around two pilgrimages that the speaker
undertakes, each to a vexed bastion of the Old South. Both are in
Mississippi. One is Vicksburg, with its battlefield graveyards and
antebellum mansions, where the speaker dreams that "the ghost of
history lies down beside me/rolls over, pins me beneath her heavy
arm." The other is Gulfport, an even more fraught locale for
Trethewey, for it is the place where she was born--and also where
Jefferson Davis died. Gulfport is the setting of the collection's
title sequence, a superbly rendered group of unrhymed sonnets; on
Ship Island, off the coast from Gulfport, the Union army stationed
one of its first black regiments, the Louisiana Native Guard, who
served as guards at a compound for Confederate prisoners. The
guardsmen's experience is evoked through the monologue of one of
their number, a former slave who, because he is literate and the
prisoners he guards are often not, spends his days writing letters
home for them. This richly ironic dramatic situation allows for
considerable narrative breadth; each sonnet purports to be one of the
soldier's journal entries, and Trethewey manages to replicate the
loftiness and florid mannerism of Victorian diction without allowing
the poem to become stilted. The following section serves as a good
example:
I
listen, put down in ink what I know
they
labor to say between silences
too
big for words: worry for beloveds--
My
Dearest, how are you getting along--
what
has become of their small plots of land--
did
you harvest enough food to put by?
They
long for the comfort of former lives--
I
see you as you were, waving goodbye.
Some
send photographs--a likeness in case
the
body can't return. Others dictate
harsh
facts of this war: The hot air carries
the
stench of limbs, rotten in the bone pit.
Flies
swarm--a black cloud. We hunger, grow weak.
When
men die, we eat their share of hardtack.
Trethewey
is clearly a poet who honors the tradition, yet her collection's
greatest achievement arises from her willingness to reinterpret and
reform her definition of tradition, be it the literary tradition or
the hoary received wisdoms of southern culture. Trethewey also
understands that toppling this latter tradition's racism and sexism
requires great inventiveness, and she undertakes her quest without
resorting to predictable strategies. The collection's final section
begins with a poem whose conceit suggests that a comic treatment will
follow: The speaker dreams she is having her photo taken with the
Fugitive poets, but rather than play this situation for its satiric
possibilities, the poem ends in decidedly ambivalent fashion, echoing
Quentin Compson's all-too-familiar refrain from Absalom, Absalom:
Yes,
I
say to the glass of bourbon I'm offered.
We're
lining up now--Robert Penn Warren,
his
voice just audible above the drone
of
bulldozers, telling us where to stand.
Say
"race," the photographer croons. I'm in
blackface
again when the flash freezes us.
My
father's white, I tell them, and rural.
You
don't hate the South? they ask. You don't hate it?
The
speaker answers this question by attempting to beat the Literary Good
Old Boys at their own game, partly through a sequence of elegiac
recollections of childhood that grant a grave dignity to her southern
upbringing, even as they detail racial taunts, a history class in
which students are asked to sit through multiple screenings of Gone
with the Wind, and the Klan burning a cross on her family's lawn.
(This latter poem--a villanelle--is also a considerable technical
tour de force.) But the collection's most forceful response to the
questions put forth by the Fugitive Dream Chorus comes in "Elegy
for the Native Guards," a kind of coda to the book's title poem.
It chronicles a visit to the Gulfport historical site where the
Native Guard brigades were stationed, although the speaker discovers
that their presence there has not been memorialized. Like Lowell in
his majestic elegy for Colonel Shaw and his black soldiers, the poem
manages to begrudgingly honor Allen Tate's "Ode to the
Confederate Dead" while at the same time savaging the
matter-of-fact racism and languid gothicism of that poem, whose
sensibility lives on in a park ranger who "shows us casemates,
cannons" and "a store that sells/souvenirs, tokens of
history long buried." Trethewey quotes from "Ode" in
her epigraph, and borrows some of its grave iambic music. But this is
where the similarity ends. Trethewey's closing stanzas are masterful:
The
Daughters of the Confederacy
has
placed a plaque here, at the fort's entrance--
each
Confederate soldier's name raised hard
in
bronze; no names carved for the Native Guards--
2nd
Regiment, Union Men, black phalanx.
What
is monument to their legacy?
All
the grave markers, all the crude headstones--
water-lost.
Now fish dart among their bones,
and
we listen for what the waves intone.
Only
the fort remains, near forty feet high,
round,
unfinished, half open to the sky,
the
elements--wind, rain--God's deliberate eye.
Surely
there are readers who will find these lines a bit turgid, their music
and rhetoric recalling "Elegy in an English Churchyard"--as
though Modernism never happened. Yet Trethewey, indifferent as she
seems to be to aesthetic party lines and the dictates of mere poetic
fashion, would doubtless counter that such concerns are parochial.
And I think she would be right.
Major
Jackson is another young African American writer who has with his new
collection embraced a thoroughly unfashionable style. Hoops is a
puzzling and eccentric volume, maddening at times in its digressive
self-indulgence but always brilliantly readable. And, in contrast to
the exemplary cohesion of Jackson's first collection, Leaving Saturn
(2002), Hoops is something of a loose, baggy monster of a book; its
title poem is a revised and expanded version of a poem included in
Leaving Saturn, and it also includes a number of additional sections
of "Urban Renewal," the effort that served as the opening
sequence of the earlier book. Hoops, therefore, seems less an
individual collection than an ongoing installment of some larger
project. This project seems now to include a long poem that serves as
the book's centerpiece, the sixty-page "Letter to Brooks" a
sprawling discursive piece written in, of all things, rime royal. As
Jackson reminds us at one point in the poem, it's the stanza employed
in Auden's "Letter to Lord Byron." The form gives him the
opportunity to rhyme "desk" with "Audenesque" and
offer up Audenesque chatter, allusion-mongering, wit, and
name-dropping. It also permits Jackson to undertake what amounts to a
book-length mash note to his first poetic love, Gwendolyn Brooks.
It's the early--and often Audenesque--poetry of Brooks which Jackson
loves, the elegance and narrative complexity of A Street in
Bronzeville and particularly Annie Allen, a book that also contains
lengthy passages in a variation on rime royal. I've spoken in some
detail about "Letter's" prosodic pedigree because this sort
of thing seems to be a matter of crucial importance to Jackson.
Whereas Leaving Saturn was concerned with the Bildungsroman
narrative, which drives many a first collection of poetry--in
Jackson's case with gritty portraits and narratives of growing up in
Philadelphia--Hoops is all about learning your chops; it's about
technique more than content. Leaving Saturn was an exemplary first
collection, and I suppose in a more problematic way Hoops is an
exemplary second book. Interestingly enough, the contrast I speak of
is no better described than by Stanley Kunitz in a 1950 review of
Brooks's Annie Allen:
Like
many second books, this is an uneven one. In his (sic) first
book,
as a rule, the poet exults in his discovery that he can fly;
in
his second book he tests his speed and his range and possibly
even
begins his examination of his theory of flight ...
Jackson
tries all of these things, too, some more successfully than others.
The strongest efforts in the new collection remain the sort of
autobiographical narratives Jackson perfected in Leaving Saturn.
Hoops's title poem falls into this category, as does "Selling
Out," which opens the collection. Here the adolescent speaker
and a friend, flesh from working a shift at McDonald's, attempt to
score some drugs; they're way out of their league, however:
We
wore Gazelles, matching sheepskins,
and
the ushanka, miles from Leningrad.
Chris
said, Let's cop some blow despite
my
schoolboy jitters. A loose spread
of
dealers preserved corners. Then a kid,
large
for the chrome Huffy he pedaled,
said
he had the white stuff and led us
to
an alley fronted by an iron gate on
a
gentrified street edging Northern Liberties.
I
turned to tell Chris how the night
air
dissolved like soil, how jangling
keys
made my neck itch, how maybe
this
wasn't so good an idea, when
the
cold opening of gun-barrel
steel
poked my head, and Chris's eyes
widened
like two water spills before
he
bound away to a future of headphones
and
release parties. Me? The afterlife?
Had
I ever welcomed back the old
neighborhood?
Might a longing
persistent
as the seedcorn maggot
tunnel
through me? All I know:
a
single dog barked his own vapor,
an
emptiness echoed through blasted
shells
of rowhomes rising above,
and
I heard deliverance in the bare
branches
fingering a series of powerlines
in
silhouette to the moon's hushed
excursion
across the battered fields
of
our lives, that endless night
of
ricocheting fear and shame....
The
effortless tetrameter, the shift from the narrative of the mugging to
the lyric introspection of the later lines--it's all handled with
great panache. Jackson surely has proven that he can fly, that he has
the "speed and range."
"Letter
to Brooks," however, is mostly "theory of flight." As
the ending of "Selling Out," suggests, Jackson has a
weakness for elaborately worked-over metaphors and conceits, and a
penchant for show-stopping rhetoric. "Letter to Brooks" has
all this in abundance, sometimes to the poem's detriment, for it
frequently turns into digression and beside-the-point editorializing
on culture--high and low--and (especially) poetry. Like Auden's
"Letter to Lord Byron," the poem is given some structural
cohesion through its epistolary conceit: Jackson's aim is to guide
his illustrious forebear through contemporary America, but he doesn't
follow a carefully plotted itinerary. We glimpse the poet on his
travels to reading gigs, writers' colonies, and even that most
unpoetic of destinations, the AWP convention. And we get rhymes on
the order of "Derrida" and "DVD" "get our
fill" and "Cypress Hill." Here's a fairly
representative stanza:
Art
as ritual, said again and again,
Most
recently by DJ Spooky,
Who
cites the sound collage as transcendent
Rite
building a nation, our esprit
De
corps. Hip-hop's current genius loci
Believes
the cut, scratch, and spin
Amends
heteroglossia & situates Bakhtin.
It
helps that Jackson employs all of these strategies with a fair amount
of earnestness, displaying a self-deprecating humor that is quite
different from the self-congratulatory wit that often mars Auden's
"Lord Byron." And the poem is not all about networking;
there are, for example, some touching passages devoted to the poet's
young son, and for all the with-it references in the poem, Jackson
comes across as endearingly square. He makes it clear to us that his
sympathies are not with the avant-garde. He slams the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E
poets and, for that matter, slams Slams. In a fairly lengthy
appraisal of the era of the Black Arts movement, he sides with Robert
Hayden over Amiri Baraka, and he of course favors Brooks's early
formalist work over the sloganeering free verse of her later career.
This is not to say that Jackson secretly watches the Fox network or
subscribes to The New Criterion. Jackson, like Trethewey, is in
search of a personal canon and a self-defining style, one that is not
hobbled by doctrinaire approaches to ideologies or aesthetics.
"Letter to Brooks" for all its eccentricity and sometimes
misplaced ambition, can be seen as a step toward realizing this goal.
Jackson is clearly a significant talent, and his accomplishment may
prove to be considerable.
David
Rivard's fourth collection, Sugartown, like Jackson's "Letter to
Brooks," is a sustained examination of what used to be called
"the American scene" His approach, however, is minimalist
rather than maximalist: He favors short lines, a telegraphic approach
to syntax, and metaphors too restless to extend themselves into
conceits. Yet thanks to Rivard's jittery associative talents and the
sternness of his scrutiny--both of the world and of the self--he
possesses a breadth and authority that the maximalists among us would
have to envy. We hear echoes of Robert Creeley and George Oppen in
the poems, not only of their idiosyncratic approach to syntax, but
also of Oppen's troubled social consciousness and Creeley's wry
self-appraisals and sudden shifts in diction. We also sense the
presence of the East Europeans, particularly Zbigniew Herbert and
Adam Zagajewski.
This
list says something about Rivard's ambitions and his standards;
they're not easy writers to emulate; they share a concern for how
consciousness unfolds, but they are not interested in merely charting
the white noise of experience in the manner of John Ashbery and his
followers. And they are all in their own way--even Creeley--decidedly
political writers, concerned above all with those sudden collisions
between self and world, between introspection and conscience. These
writers have bestowed upon Rivard an almost paradoxical desire to
move toward graven-ness and epigram on the one hand, and
improvisational relentlessness on the other. Rivard favors what Oppen
calls "a poetry of statement/... at close quarters." He
formulates contentions only so that he can put them to the test. The
tone of the poems, even when they incorporate humor, is always deeply
self-conscious and edgy. This is even suggested by the title of the
effort I quote from here, "We Either Do or Don't, But the
Problem Evolves Anyway":
It
isn't that hard, they say.
It
doesn't amount to more than an ache, really.
Give
yourself some space, they say--
as
if the self were a cozy little back room, a small hall
strung
with incandescent streamers,
and
all that needed to be done, all that was ever required,
was
to tear a few down.
But
the problem is, friends,
the
problem is
there
are a great many top-of-the-line things
that
each & every one of us
has
gone around saying we'd die for,
items
of an apparently
absolute
power
and
perfection, in a variety of impenetrable styles--
"That's
a color hair I'd die for," she says,
speaking
sometime in the afterglow of a dark haircut
flickering by,
a
bleak thing to say,
but
so human, so sadly & completely full of the silliness
of
wanting
that
for once it sends
all
the clarity suspended in the chlorinated sunlight
straight
over the edge--
it
haywires the clouds with lightning,
and
the inscrutable sluices flood.
And
what do you do then?
The
passage gives some sense of Rivard's method, his
float-like-a-butterfly-but-sting-like-a-bee approach. The statements
and rhetorical questions rain down with an almost pugilistic
relentlessness, with dizzying but methodical thrusts and parries.
Rivard's interrogation of contemporary jargon, of advertising lingo
perverted into a parody of self-examination, puts him in league with
the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poets. But where those poets theorize, Rivard
rages. He spits out his rhetorical questions with a kind of prophetic
alarm. Rivard can't always sustain this level of truculent
intensity--I've quoted from the first half of a poem that bogs down
in its final stanzas--but when this poet is at his frequent best, his
technique is flawless.
Rivard
has been working in this manner for some twenty years now, and its
dangers have less to do with craft than with character: Rivard's
Larkinesque sternness, both toward the self and toward the culture in
which he dwells, has in the past threatened to devolve into
self-laceration and misanthropy. Sugartown is Rivard's best book
because he has replaced this tendency with--in places, but they're
all the right ones--something like tenderness. He is still capable of
acute and withering satire, as when he describes the crowd at a ritzy
arts benefit as "professional white folk/under glass:/suited
bipolar disorders/with compelling hairstyles & clout/being served
by/'people of color.'" But this sort of writing is leavened by
passages of lyrical but unsentimental wonder. These are not emotions
the poet feels particularly comfortable with: One of the poems,
tellingly, is entitled "Acceptance?" and question marks are
implicit in many others. Yet it is precisely this tentativeness, this
suspicion on the writer's part that his grim postulates and cold
self-appraisals have become Pavlovian, that gives Rivard's new poems
their resonance.
A
poem set at a children's birthday party starts with a description of
the parents' boredom and discomfort, rails at the benumbingly
consumerist gifts which the birthday child receives, and even
complains about the "spendthrift sweetness" of the children
themselves. But after a page or so Rivard arrives at an exquisite and
hard-won conclusion:
Amir, Sara, Simone,
Nina,
Lily, William, Amy &
Olivia, here
for
Simone's sixth birthday;
"Help
me," Sara will say,
later, wanting a
Band-Aid,
holding up a finger that
won't be bleeding--
"help
me"
the
story often enough
arrived
at,
told, or not told--
"we
look almost happy out in the sun," Transtromer says,
"while
we bleed to death from wounds we know nothing about"
And
the clouded spot
on
the windowpane
is
the oil & sweat
left
by the forehead
of
someone real.
There
is no writer at work today quite like Rivard. He's strong medicine,
certainly, but his peculiar intensity and refusal to harbor delusion
during a time when other writers of his generation seem more
interested in shtick and posturing make his writing seem all the more
necessary.
Rodney
Jones is as garrulous as Rivard is tight-lipped, but the two writers
share several qualities, not least of which are an abiding moral
seriousness, and a baffled dismay about the mess in which
contemporary Americans have found themselves--an America where, as
Jones laments in one of his recent poems, "we ask/which most
cogently represents us/Leaves of Grass or The Simpsons" and
where "there is the idea that every/living thing is a subset of
human/control." Like James Wright in his later work--and Wright,
along with C. K. Williams, has been one of Jones's most enduring
influences--he likes to play the raconteur, and his comic timing can
be flawless. And yet, like all true comedians, his vision is
ultimately a tragic one. Salvation Blues, the title of Jones's
career-spanning collection, suggests a stance of comic paradox, but
comedy for Jones always morphs into something more desperate. He's
interested in salvation as Jose Ortega y Gassett defined it, as "an
idea of the shipwrecked"; and I imagine that Jones would agree
with this contention.
The
form Jones has evolved to suit this approach is a line of sometimes
ungainly length--up to twenty syllables in places. It serves his
purposes well; the strong iambic underpinnings give even his most
sprawling lines some rhythmic force, while at the same time
accommodating his concerns for narrative and anecdote. It's also a
line that's apt to violate a number of free verse prosodic taboos,
for it is likely to be laden with adverbs, adjectives, and a good
many of the Big Abstractions. And Jones's narratives are rarely
linear; they come in the form of rambling periodic sentences packed
with digressions, biting asides, and sudden tonal shifts. The opening
stanzas of "Contempt," a recollection of a dead-end, white
collar job, constitute a good showcase of Jones's style:
"Lizards,"
he'd say, dispensing with local men, and then resheath
his
pen and huff back to his drafting table,
A
fiber board pristined with vinyl and overhung with the ambiguous
linked
appendages of maybe a dozen modular lights,
One
of which, by some unconscionable kink of logic, he'd bring
screeching
down above
His
latest renderings of nun-like, mestiza hens I'd named like
missiles:
the Star 5000, the T-100 Egg Machine,
Those
days of fruitless scratching on a pad, those nights of Klee and
Rilke,
and what abortifacient labor
Leaves,
instead of money, that sense of energy troweled out and
slapped
up, no more than a phrase of two
That
sticks, a sketch, no novel, no painting, only time whining
irrevocably,
and the feeling
of
events put off or missed....
Satirical,
yes, but the satire derives from something other than postmodern
irony. Some of it seems to come from a childhood spent in rural
Alabama, a place the speaker can't completely detest, given that one
of his longest and finest poems is entitled "Elegy for the
Southern Drawl" and another called "Small Lower Class
Southern White Male," scathing as it may be, amounts to a kind
of involuntary self-portrait. Jones's stance arises not so much from
white-liberal guilt or confessions along the lines of, "I don't
know what to say either. Eeether/eyether ..." It's instead a
kind of bafflement, a near-Chekhovian amazement at human folly and
hypocrisy. A poem devoted to the arrival of television in the Alabama
of Jones's childhood sounds a bit like a passage from Marquez's One
Hundred Years of Solitude; the tone emphasizes the sheer strangeness
of the event rather than its sociology:
Suddenly some
Of
them in the next valley had one.
You
would know them by their lights
Burning
late at night, and the recentness
And
distance of events entering their talk,
But
not one in our valley; for a long time
No
one had one, so when the first one
Arrived
in the van from the furniture store
And
the men had set the box on the lawn,
At
first we stood back from it, circling it
As
they raised its antenna and staked in
The
guy wires before taking it in the door
And
I seem to recall a kind of blue light
Flickering
from inside and then a woman
Calling
out that they had got it tuned in--
A
little fuzzy, a ghost picture, but something
That
would stay with us, the way we hurried
Down
the dirt road, the stars, the silence,
Then
everyone disappearing into the houses.
As
in so many of Jones's poems, the comic virtues of this scene do not
detract from Jones's essential wariness, his outsider's skepticism.
Troubled as he may be by his "roots," he is also troubled
by the rigidities of anything that looks like convention, and he is
just as apt to focus on the absurdities of academic life as he is on
an upbringing in the Bible Belt. And, because Jones is ultimately a
moralist--or perhaps it's better to label him a comic moralist--it is
not surprising that so many of his poems are variants upon the ars
poetica, bearing titles such as "A Defense of Poetry," "The
Poetry Reading," "The Work of Poets," and "Moment
of Whitman." Poetry, for Jones, is one of the few human
endeavors that are resistant to debasement. But not wholly resistant,
as an acrid portrait of an elder poet teacher attests: "The
great man, head like a cauliflower, addressed our poems/Thursday
mornings, pontificating between coughing jags." The piece ends
with a chilling exchange:
He
liked my poems best. Not much. I asked one other thing:
"After
all those years and books, what do you think of poetry?"
"I
loathe and detest it."
Avoiding
this fate is no easy matter if you possess Jones's inclination toward
dyspepsia and his disdain for many of the received pieties of current
poetic discourse. And yet in "The Poetry Reading," after a
page and a half of lampooning the vaudevillian silliness of campus
poetry readings, Jones concludes with a passage of Horatian
simplicity and directness:
After
all, not much happens in this lounge
Or
small auditorium under the library,
And
yet those who are here hear, don't they,
Among
the lubricated delicacies for the auditory senses,
A
thing that is right and singular to the heart?
Oh
it does not always have to issue from guilt
Or
some lingering inferiority to the British.
It
can be done plainly or in elaborate meters.
Afterward,
someone still unheard from
May
actually go into a room alone and read it.
This
tyro reader opening a book of poetry would be fortunate indeed if
that book were Salvation Blues, and it is a collection which, in a
just world, would win all of the major awards. Literary fashion may
be too fickle to allow for this, but Jones, like Rivard, Trethewey,
and Jackson, is one of a small number of figures at work today who
play for high stakes, who are immune to triviality and invite
important reckonings. In short, they remind us what is has been like
"to live with what was here."
Native
Guard: Poems by Natasha Trethewey. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. $22.00
(cloth). Hoops: Poems by Major Jackson. New York: W. W. Norton.
$23.95 (cloth). Sugartown by David Rivard. Saint Paul: Graywolf
Press. $14.00 (paper). Salvation Blues: One Hundred Poems, 1985-2005
by Rodney Jones. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. $24.00 (cloth).
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