The Science of Nothing
by Marty Gervais
Mosaic Press, 2000
Reviewed by Joanna M. Weston
Stories flow through Gervais' poetry like spring streams, alive and
alight with sound and vision 'confessing the sweet narratives/ of our
lives, joys,/ things that went wrong/ tracing our histories ...'. He
tells the stories of when he was eleven, twelve or sixteen 'tracing out
a future so full/ of uncertainty, so full/of chaos ...' ('I Stopped
Writing About You') from the perspective 'of those summer days/ in the
south/ when he was young ...' ('The Louisville Slugger¹).
Gervais'
stories sing through his words, bring 'The Hangman in Love' to our
knowledge, make the two couples of 'Women at the Fence' into our own
next-door neighbours, people whose pain and eccentricity we do more than
observe. The poems are deeply evocative of the sunlit world of childhood
with the underlying poignancy of things seen and not quite understood at
the time - as in 'Message to the Town'. His on-going theme of himself
as a child who was a bad hockey-player and how this fact touches other
people's lives enriches our understanding of childhood, its triumphs
and its despairs.
His language is precise, specific and yet engages our
total attention: '... helped/ families taste the mysteries/ of death,
the subtleties/ of living in pain, and now/ this, his body lay on the/
cold cement that fall/ morning ...'. He allows our imagination to
contain and expand the images, locate them in our own experience and to
own them. His line-breaks, which are frequently awkward, force our
attention to the words, make us hold them and live within the image.
The
title of the book, The Science of Nothing, is deceptive: the
poems are about the art and science of living, with Gervais' emphasis
being on life and the inherent promise of joy and pain in it all. He
sees the joy that accompanies suffering, the pain that lies beneath the
surface of everyday living, but never loses sight of the warmth at the
heart of it all. He gives us hope that ordinary life will somehow move
along with warmth to cushion the sorrow, with understanding to enhance
the joy. 'As a boy skating/ in an old barn I'd stop/ at centre ice,
and peer/ up at the banners/ imagining I was/ part of it all' - he is
at the centre, in prime position, looking up to symbols of other
people's old successes, and he is part of their success. His poetry is
to be read, reread, treasured.
JOANNA M. WESTON: born in England; married to
an accountant, Robert; 3 sons, one daughter-in-law, 3 grandchildren, two
cats; has a green thumb and an enlarging garden. M.A. from the
University of British Columbia; appears in several anthologies;
published in Canada, U.S.A., U.K. etc. for the past 15 years in
magazines such as CANADIAN WOMAN STUDIES, CHIRON REVIEW, DANDELION,
ENDLESS MOUNTAIN REVIEW, SPIN, WRITER’S OWN MAGAZINE, GREEN’S
MAGAZINE, etc.; reviews poetry. chapbooks: ONE OF THESE LITTLE ONES,
1987; CUERNAVACA DIARY, 1990; SEASONS, 1993; ALL SEASONS, 1996 (2nd
edition 1997).