Alberta
Anthology 2006: 53 Award-Winning Stories, Monologues, Essays & Poems
Presented by The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Edited by A.G. Boss,
Frontenac House, 2006
bulletin from the low light,
j. fisher, Frontenac House, 2006
A Summer Father,
Joanna M. Weston, Frontenac House, 2006
Taqsim,
Zaid Shlah, Frontenac House, 2006
Reviewed by Richard Stevenson
Every year I look forward to the new
crop of books in Frontenac’s Quartet Series, now in its sixth year.
Every year brings something different, something new, be that a new
aesthetic or different poetics from the anecdotal realist mainstream of
the growing stable of Frontenac poets – by now the range runs from
imagism to Beat to spoken word -- or an ever-expanding e-book profile
series on Alberta authors. Eclectic has become a watchword of
this small press. This year brings two surprises: a CBC contest
anthology and a book of online blog poetry, literally a memoir in verse.
I wish I could be more excited about
the anthology, which, in addition to the four genres specified in the
subtitle, is further subdivided into first, second, and third place
winners in Professional, Amateur, and, Youth categories. The Youth
category is represented only in the story section, and the bulk of the
material – professional and amateur, represented by sixteen items
apiece – not surprisingly, evinces a higher level of composition
skill.
I say "higher level"; in
truth, the bulk of the selections are merely publishable or competent; I
wasn’t particularly bowled over by anything, even in the professional
category. I suspect this is attributable more to factors of maximum
length and broadcast time constraints than any limitation in skill
levels of the respective authors, however. Or perhaps the purse just isn’t
high enough, and the professionals are sending their best work
elsewhere. ;-) In the case of the authors and poets I was familiar with,
this certainly seems to be the case. There may have been an unspoken
gentility factor too, as one would expect with a family broadcast, so
the bulk of the material is of the kitchen sink, realist stamp and isn’t
too adventurous in either thematic reach or use of language.
The standout story is first-place
professional winner Leslie Greentree’s "The Brilliant Save,"
about amateur hockey heroics and male braggadocio: how the guy who can
stop a puck with his tough exterior becomes a metaphor for a life cut
short by adolescent bravado. Nothing new, but the extended metaphor is
handled well throughout, and the story is terse and economical, handling
the conventions of the Freytag triangle with wit and grace. Other pieces
in the Amateur category – second place "Rainy Day, Big City
Street, for instance, or first-place Youth category winner, "The
Vacuum Cleaner" by Sarah Feutl – aren’t really full-fledged
short stories at all, but, one assumes, autobiographical sketches. One’s
a postcard story. All rely on situational or dramatic irony, which the
reader can see coming a mile off. The best that I can say here is that
the dialogue is credible and the characters are well drawn. Much is
derivative of modern realist masters like W.O., or Ken Mitchell though.
One hopes the younger authors will find their own voices down the road.
The Creative Non-Fiction pieces deliver
more on their initial promise, and I find a number of pieces quite
compelling and resourceful in the use of language. Professional
first-place winner Rebecca Bradley turns in the standout performance
with her "Wedding in Sepia," a meditation on a wedding
picture, circa 1911, Calgary, which makes much of body language, eye
contact, and poise and pose to adumbrate the lacunae in Victorian
manners and behavioral/dress codes, and speculate from empirical
evidence on future relations. Second Place, Professional Category winner
Caterina Edwards offers a similarly laconic, masterful piece of
retrospective narration that contrasts a little girl’s perceptions to
the larger movements of history. The timing is perfect and the control
of colloquial speech rhythms and the Mother Goose melodies of children’s
sentence inflections note perfect.
This section runs the gamut from
personal memoir and/or reflection to character sketch and travelogue. I
only wish some of the pieces were three times as long as they are, so
they could turn up more perceptions and play more with creative
non-fiction plot and narrative technique.
Editor A.G. Boss kicks off the dramatic
monologue section with a piece of his own, "Reflecting
Reason," as if to set the tone or show the others how such a marvel
of concision can be constructed. It’s a short metafictional piece that
plays off the mirror –mirror-on-the-wall motif and fairy tale language
to tell a story of a son who repeats the sins of the father in rejecting
his feminine, intuitive side as represented by a Queen mother who dies
shortly after he child’s birth. Her death leaves the husband bereft
and he retreats into a rational existence, naming his son Reason. The
naming and modeling of everything functional and acquisitive leaves the
son looking at his father’s face in the mirror until he is able to
find his feminine side in a storage locker of his mother’s things. He
finds happiness by throwing off the utilitarian yoke. It’s a clever,
witty piece, a kind of cartoonish fractured fairy tale. One of the few
pieces that goes beyond realism.
For my money, the other pieces pale
beside it, though I admired first-place professional winner Marty Chan’s
handling of the obsessive lurker in "Waiting"; loved the
claustrophobic sense he creates in a few scant pages. Second-place
winner Connie Massing’s "Death by Chocolate" too is a
confection of pure language delight, witty and perceptive on an
all-too-familiar relationship between a lonely woman and her friend the
fridge treat.
I find the first place poetry and
poetic prose professional category winner Garry Garrison’s "Grand
Canyon Phantasm" oddly prosaic by comparison. The lines are rather
flat and chatty, and the poet tells more than he reveals. Too much
adjectival flab, too little concision in image/metaphor. Second-place
professional category winner Rosemary Griebel’s "The Helen
Poems" fairs slightly better, to my way of thinking, if only for
their more cinematically effective use of cutaway and concise
scenography. The language is still too chatty. The rest of the poems go
from bad to worse, ending in the amateur category with slice-and-dice
prose anecdote.
Nothing is particularly horrible, and
the anthology offers some smiles of recognition and a good, quick read
on the beach; it can be dipped into or read through with much pleasure,
if little in the way of discovery. By and large, the language and
writing are adroit, if the turns to which much of the narrative and
observational zeal are addressed seem wanting.
Perhaps the best writers just aren’t
entering CBC contests with the same hope and spirit of youthful idealism
as they once did. Or perhaps I’m getting too old and cranky. I’m
surprised the crop was so thin on the ground though. I love the CBC; I
expected more.
J. Fisher’s blog book, bulletin
from the low light, is disappointing too. Again, he’s going for
the Charles Bukowski wannabe aesthetic: free verse swatches of what
passes for self-analysis in self-flagellation as he documents incident
after incident in the daily round of drinking and drug debauchery,
visits to counselors, the struggle to maintain dignity while one is just
struggling to get by. How much do you want to watch a drug addict and
alcoholic abuse himself? How long before you tire of the long swatch
free verse strophe, minus the polyphony of a Purdy or a Gervais? I mean,
he’s in the pocket a lot of the time and knows how to write the street
poem and knows what passes for street cred and rhythmic panache, but the
content gets tiresome, and I wish this poet would get the help he needs
and quit with the poet maudite pose already. It’s been done before; it’s
been done better; the poet did it one better in his first book.
The problem this go-round, I think is
the premise: the notion that one could keep a blog in free verse and
pass off the daily or weekly entries with all their dross as high art.
It just isn’t. It’s poetic memoir, to be sure, but could be so much
more if the lines were burnished a little and the poet made several
passes to layer the poems, add a little of that Purdy-like polyphony
that it could sustain. More irony, less bravado, please; less
confessionalism – even the Confessionalists dug deep in metaphor and
burnished the urn – more exploration of image. Poetry should be more
than the next fix – for poet and reader both.
A Summer Father is
short on ambition too: while adding to the literature of war, in making
use of an absent father’s own war poetry, journals, and letters home
to begin a dialogue, rather like Natalie Cole’s reach across time in
electronic duet with her father on "Unforgettable," it is
poignant and spare in all the good ways. Yet it doesn’t push
imagination or invention as far as it might and it never comes up to the
power and concision of the great war poets like Wilfred Owen, Sigfried
Sassoon, or, more recently, Yusef Komanyaaka and W. D. Ehrhart.
I would like to see more engagement
with the poems of her father’s book: de-construction, palimpsest,
word- and line-weaving, pastiche even. Not just the use of her father’s
verse in epigraph and postscript.
To be fair, the book is about absences,
lacunae – specifically, the longing for a father-daughter relationship
over many miles of ocean and over much lost time; the idea is that a
daughter might be able to patch together a quilt of memories and keep
memory warm. There isn’t a lot left of the father but a few poems, a
few letters, a few domestic front memories. The focus is necessarily
domestic: is as much about what the father missed, as about what the
daughter missed by his supreme sacrifice. Of course, all wars are
horrible and waste resources and energy and consume everything in their
mad path. No need to dwell on that; it’s obvious enough.
Not surprisingly, the poet’s father
is no Wilfred Owen either; he’s a post-Georgian poetaster, writing
mostly doggerel or workmanlike sonnets or accentual-syllabic pieces,
declaiming more than exploring, or merely describing felicitous
landscapes or weather, or so one assumes on the basis of the extracts
and one full sonnet included from his one published volume. Still, there’s
gold in the juxtaposition of the more modern sensibility that longs to
reach out in terse, imagistic lines; gold in the juxtaposition of the
youthful sketch and photo of the grey-haired daughter. It’s not
nostalgia that we experience but quiet, poignant grief.
I like this poet’s terseness and
sense of play:
we played follow-the-spitfire
ring-a-ring-a-pilot-gone
the bomber’s bridge has fallen down
here’s one fair-lady-o
buried with no funeral
in the crook of a tree
hidden by blossom
so no one can find me
for I am the child
whose bones were ground
to make bread for war.
(A Nursery War," p. 19)
She’s opened a fertile dialogue and
Joanna W. Weston makes up for the lack of ambition in a quietly
plaintive voice that spares the reader of any false heroics or
sentimentality. I would have liked more emotional range, but the poet
eventually won me over.
I’ve saved the best for last. Even
so, Zaid Shah’s book, Taqsim, is a mixed bag for me. I admire
the poetics: the poet’s use of open-form free verse poetics – adept,
expansive, catching things in the warp and weft of the fabric; I like
the formal variety, from short-lined, almost haiku – nay, renga-like
– stitches to ambling, multiple-margined strophes and closed form
stanzas in various nonce forms – triplets, quatrains, etc.
Perhaps the frontispiece will help to
nail down the content:
A taqsim is an improvisational
Middle Eastern medley in which the musician moves between
formal musical structure and free-flowing improvisation. In Taqsim
Zaid Shlah writes within the formal structure of the lyric, but
incorporates an innovative lyricism that agitates between his Iraqi
and Canadian heritage: a history of music, food, war and love in a
space as wide as the mountains and prairies of his native Alberta to
as far away as the land between two rivers, the Tigris and the
Euphrates.
Line for line, stanza for stanza,
strophe for strophe, Shlah’s the best poet here. He turns a
mellifluous and highly rhythmic line; he successfully weaves the stuff
of history, familial memories, landscape, even cuisine into his poetry,
performing a kind of word jazz that improvises on the blue notes of
recent Iraqi history and the rich madrigals of his mother’s remembered
speech. He riffs on his unique place in the world, the double vision
afforded by one who grieves the narrative forced on his countrymen by
Bush’s fundamentalist Christian warriors, and speculates on the demise
of the Western empire, wondering where it is, and how it is a man in
such an imperfect fragmented, post-Modern world is to make his stand;
and how he can find solace in the family that carries such inestimable
baggage.
It’s the subject of many post-modern
long poem sequences, perhaps going as far back as David Jones’
Anatheméta and forward to the projectionists, Creeley, Olson et al.
Strange bedfellows, to be sure, but Shlah draws on a lot of poetic
traditions here, including the Arabic revelatory and amatory Ghazal
tradition of Persia. It’s a delightful stew and I find myself
nodding to the music frequently, smiling like I do when I hear a
westerner like Ornette Coleman improvising off skeins of melody played
by the master musicians of Jajouka. The scales aren’t the same but the
free jazz melody just keeps weaving in and around the beats.
Canada needs more poets like Zaid Shlah,
but don’t take my word for it; here’s a riff to get you humming:
hear this howl oud, the Taurus
Mountains occupy
the northern landscape of my brain, and
weightless
as a pod of Orcas at the bottom of the
Arctic Sea
drowned out by Bach’s 6 cello suites,
and
Heidegger read Nietsche whom I ate, I
take my
gin and whisky neat, to cool the storm,
delineate ...
If you believe as I do that the best of
poetry is word jazz, then this is the real McCoy, free jazz dancing
light as a mosquito above the concentric circles of a pond the frog
jumped in. I’m along for the entire ride.
Richard Stevenson lives and teaches
in Lethbridge, Alberta. Works include Bye Bye Blackbird: An
Elegiac Sequence for Miles Davis (Ekstasis Editions, 2007) and Parrot
With Tourette’s (Black Moss Press, Palm Poets Series, 2006). |