False Maps for Other Creatures
by Jay MillAr
Nightwood Editions, 2005
Reviewed by Kemeny Babineau
*A MillAREview*
See
TDR's interview with Jay MillAr
Jay Millar is young enough to be involved in the
various poetics of
youth with a certain direction yet unchosen but he’s
old enough to be
already laying it down. And I’d be willing to wager a
one acre wood lot
to a square mile of Toronto’s downtown asphalt that the
voice of False
Maps for Other Creatures will be the one that draws
him out in the end.
The poems in this book are undeniably fruitious and
wild. They embody
language as a growing, sensate thing. Each line quivers
like an open
ended nerve, and every line begins as if thought has
just begun. In the
end we begin all over. These poems are process and
observation
compressed into the moment before expansion. This is
the mind cracked
open to reveal an anthill of words.
Jesse Huisken’s illustrations, on the cover and inside,
are a fine
compliment to the work therein. Ranging as they do from
the realistic to
the abstract they also conjure up specimen sketches
from a biologists
field notes, and Millar himself has conducted research
into the forest
dwelling white-footed mouse. These visuals then are
like tiny nests for
Millar’s poem creatures. Viewed individually Huisken’s
tiny pencil
drawings on the cover appear quizzically incomplete but
when seen as a
set these strange emissaries of mind belong not only to
one another but
to the earth riddled poems inside as well.
What I like most about Millar’s poetry in general and False Maps for
Other Creatures in particular is how it deals with
time. Naturally,
this is of the essence. Time is not a construct to be
written upon or
voiced over, but a moving feral intelligence,
self-immolating, immortal,
simultaneous, deadly, and gifting. This is the poetry
of the
plenipotential where in secret witness we experience
inscrutable
otherness. Millar’s poetry purely states that this is a
participatory
universe, and within that language is complicit.
Witness these lines:
The trees
through this mind
escape, are cut down,
only if we imagine
where we are was
never a woodland.
(False Maps… p 85)
or these:
is it evident
we make ourselves
how you speak
evidence
(False Maps… p 15-16)
The little bit of literary history ensconced at the
back of the book
shows that Millar is concerned with poetic tradition.
And this tradition
is the breaking with tradition, but unlike other
so-called
avant-gardists there is no attempted patricide. Rooted
in the
insurrection of bissett these poems careen towards the
shamanistic and
the mythic. Couple this influence with the semantic
wander rings thru
time that characterize the poetry of Gerry Gilbert and
you have the
makings of a finely fired poet: one aware of the
essence of time, it is
is it.
A quick scan back through Millar’s own brief literary
history reveals
this line from the poem ‘Thought King’ which appears as
in the hand made
1996 chapbook Wrapping Paper (Boondoggle Books). “I’m
thinking about
how one line can have nothing to do with next line\ and
yet they do.”
Evidently Millar has known all along, between head
fakes, where his
poetry was going. From the same text we have this: “I
haven’t got a fucking clue what I’m writing about\ it usually takes
me a while to
figure that out.” so this is the process, the path to
epiphany is muddle
through, moment by moment will get you there, and back,
but wait a
minute… some thing was missed, wha… That I can so
easily venture into
Millar’s early poetry and pull out quotes supportive of
a later more
significant text is a sure sign of a significant poet
in the making.
Wondering which direction Millar will go in next I
await his next book
feeling certain that his best work will find him
returning to the voice
of False Maps for Other Creatures. This is what the
heart lines.
SUM LAKES
in the cool morn
lives the call of song
birds and one crow
here, in the liquid
traffic of the shore
the call is calm
in the mind’s dull fire
I imagine no matter
which way I turn
I will be forever free and bitter
free for the fire burns
bitter for the suffocating
forces of that fire
the call is calm
along the liquid traffic
of the shore
out of that which all
the songbirds sing there is
who to sing a note
or two outside
the song
(False Maps… p 49)
The beauty of poetry continues to exist in the everyday
but mostly
remains unearthed, un noticed, so you’d better dig up
yours today, and
follow those False Maps for other Creatures.
Kemeny Babineau is a poet and publisher living in Mt
Pleasant ON. Under
his signature of Laurel Reed Books he has published
many titles by both
himself and others. To this point in his life he has
managed to survive
all bad luck: cross your fingers, please.
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