Burn
by Paul Vermeersch
ECW Press, 2000
Personal Effects, poems
by Ronna Bloom
Pedlar Press, 2000
Cabra
by Ian Samuels
Red Deer Press, 2000
Reviewed by rob
mclennan
Burn, by Toronto poet Paul Vermeersch, feels very much like a
first book, with all the strengths & weaknesses it implies, including a
host of physically & emotionally strong poems alongside other poems that
don't live up to the mark. One of the best examples of the first, "A
Portrait Of My Sister's Roommate" (p 17), which could easily be the
strongest in the collection, tells of a photo of the late girl, given to
the narrator's parents, after the girl's wake in their house, as "they put
it in the basement / with my grandmother's knick-knacks, / my paintings
from high school, / and all the other things / they never wanted in the
first place, / but keep."
Vermeersch, founder & host of the popular I.V. Lounge Reading
Series (& subsequent editor of the I.V. Lounge Reader anthology,
published by Insomniac Press), is very good at writing true things, & real
things, in a way reminiscent of David Donnell's narrative sweetness &
brutality, but more innocent, & naive. In Burn, he talks of rural lives,
of family, hopes, & those other things you wanted but couldn't have -
"...sometimes when you look at me / I notice a slow ghost moving through
the rooms, // wearing your perfume, touching / my back." (p 92, "RAINSTORM").
I like the way Vermeersch says much without having to say it all.
There's a rough-cut grace to these poems, & a clear but hidden violence
suggested, in poems that roam the countryside like a warm wind through the
fields.
Some of Vermeersch's poems try too hard, such as "MELANIE
PANHANDLING" (p 69-70), or "Megan On Fernwood Avenue" ( 71-3), as you see
what he's trying to achieve so badly, but can't, & it pains to read.
Other poems, such as "When I Was Superhuman" (p 14), or "The Day
Dogs Die" (p 15), evoke the myriad of childhood sensation very well, in
finely crafted lines - "I was a powerful, beautiful boy, / and I could
call down thunder and lightening, / you know, / if I really wanted to."
The first of the three sections, "the day dogs die", is the highlight of
the book, with other strong pieces such as "The Skaggs Boys" (p 18),
ending "the four of them lived like picks and shovels / in the dirt. They
were blamed for everything - / for the egging on devil's night, blody lips
/ for stolen bicycles, missing cats // the things we had to live with." I
love the implication that perhaps they were responsible, or perhaps not,
the narrative "we" guilty instead. I like that you can't tell, & have to
read between it, as most parts of childhood & memory often are.
Never cut & dry, but cloudy.
When Ronna Bloom's first collection of poems, Fear of the Ride
(Carleton University Press) came out a few years ago, I remember being
taken by the emotional fullness & stylistic sparseness of her lines, each
phrase carefully & deliberately placed, but not obviously so. In Personal
Effects, the follow-up, Bloom shifts slightly with longer lines, & less
fragmented bodies, & ever longer prose pieces. Bloom's poems are best when
she writes just below the line of giving it all, where the reader has to
fill in the gaps, but knowing, exactly, what those gaps are. "Standing
with my arms out, / full of wanting to hold / that lake and all the trees
around it // but can't quite get / my arms around them, // I too take
pictures." (p 36, "BLACK LAKE III, Aperture").
One of the sections that stands out, is the section/series "BLACK
LAKE", an eleven-part poem (or series of poems) that weave through what
Bloom is best at - the small poem fragment turning back in on itself,
sparingly & easily, "...will wait with his shutter open / for their power
to sizzle film, show up / the black light of lake, for the image / to show
up black." (p 35, BLACK LAKE II, Meticulous (D)").
Meticulous would be the best way to describe Bloom's poems,
although there are some that don't quite work, rambling on without
purpose, such as "RETREAT" (p 91), & parts of the nine-part "THIS IS YOUR
FATHER" (p 24-8).
Bloom is a photographer's poet, writing poems as a series of
portraits, whether of people, stories or ideas, invoking connections with
the work of others in that vein, such as Stephanie Bolster. "The urgency
to touch / has slowed slightly, the condoms / not used at the same clocked
/ pace." (p 72, "WE'RE GETTING CLOSER NOW"). She is brilliant at
exclaiming the astonishments - "Where'd she learn to do that? Where'd she
/ learn to love like that?" (p 29, "LONG, BROWN EYELASHES").
Personal Effects, the collection, is just what the title suggests,
of personal movements & belongings, whether items with histories & stories
of their own, or those belongings between people - "The dead air on the
phone between me and / you is a picture I couldn not take, / but there's a
space reserved for it, in the book." (p 46, "HOLD"). Really, it's the last
two stanzas of the five page "Personal Effects" that put the book as a
whole into perspective - "In my mother's house the book shelves hold the
books / and the books hold the bookmarks:", ending with "An archeology. I
don't take / what is flattened there. Just take it in." (p 70).
In Calgary poet Ian Samuels' first poetry collection, Cabra, the
young poet has written a unique small book, working through a single
fragmented whole on the idea of knowing a place as much as the particulars
of the place itself. In magnificent turns, Cabra speaks through the main
character & marrator, Cabra, of Brazil, a place the author has never been
- the country, & the myths & stories of that country (not the Terry
Gilliam film, although Robert DeNiro would not be unwelcome here).
"Perhaps our eyes would birth the land." (p 5, "You Excellency,").
To see this place is to invent it, building it from the ruins of
its own histories. Samuels writes this as an "exploration of the
imagination of Brazil", making discussions of comparisons to the actual
place irrelevant. Cabra reads like an anti-tourist guide, a series of
admonishments & testimonials, & letters, to & from the narrator, Cabra.
"The cruel scene invited an enchanted land. / Perhaps we should beg on our
knees?" (p 13, "Senhor Cabra,"). There is both a human care & inhuman
brutality expressed through these lines, writing of a culture struggling
between religious faith & base cruelties. "The officers express regret.
The bridge consists of four / chains. The women sell fish. After firing on
the crowd the / officers will restore order. The men sell goats. The
cattle are / lowing. The river turns from its southern course as if /
distracted by fine fields of Indian corn. Even the slaves need / slaves.
Celebrate masses for the weal of your souls." (p 5, "Your Excellency,").
Samuels has written a unique & beautiful poetic book of grace &
animal instincts, of the movements of slavery, colonialism, religion &
political hierarchies. "The intoxication of / mimosas might drive a man to
empire." (p 36, "Sauva").
rob mclennan is the editor/publisher of STANZAS magazine & above/ground
press, as well as the anthologies "side/lines: A Poetics" (2002, Insomniac
Press) & "YOU & YOUR BRIGHT IDEAS: NEW MONTREAL WRITING" (with Andy Brown,
fall 2001, Vehicule Press). his 6th poetry collection is "harvest: a book
of signifiers" (2001, Talonbooks). he lives in ottawa, & can be found at www.track0.com/rob_mclennan. |