Monday, February 28, 2005
Pearls
"Being involved with two people at the same time was really a hassle for me."
And that's just the first sentence!
Reviews
THE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY
AND THE RUIN OF THE WORLD
by Paul Guest
New Issues (2003) 94 pages
ISBN: 1-930974-27-2, Poetry
Paul Guest’s lyricism ranges from mystical to self deprecation and sarcasm, and his The Resurrection of the Body and the Ruin of the World traverses a great distance. The collection is able to reference, among others, Godzilla, the poet’s disability, science, and much more. The mysticism doesn’t really come off as subject matter, but rather how the poet treats his subject matter.
In “Invocation to Destructive Muses,” Guest writes, Our poet writes for hours in the myth of quiet: / interruptions pile up like debris. Earthquakes happen. / They are canceled. Tsunamis lap under doors. / Sponged up. Beach Boys die. The poet feels bad / but not too bad. This is from a poem where the first seven words are, Be it Godzilla, King of the Monsters. Yet, of all the imagery of violent destruction, the persona of the poet starts peeking through, and Guest’s particular talent is taking things that wouldn’t ordinarily fit together, and making them work naturally.
Other entries into Guest’s first book are bluntly personal. “For a Long time I Have Wanted to Write a Handi-Capable Poem” best illustrates Guest’s refusal to fall into a self-pity trap. He doesn’t wave his disability in front of the reader, he just assumes his wheel chair is part of who he is. With that in mind, he chafes at disability political correctness: ... if I were the militant type, and I’m not, I might join / my brothers and sisters in disabledom and chain myself / in solidarity / to the Slurpee machine at the 7-Eleven, but they’re idiots, / and I’d rather have a super-size grape Slurpee any day. / God, I’ve fallen into a cranky orbit. The poem also describes failed attempts to pick up women in bars as well as speaking at a conference entitled “Transitioning the Adolescent Disabled into Adulthood.”
Lines like these do well to balance the collection against its richly textured imagery. More importantly, lines like these, and the rest of the book, work hard to present a solidly original voice.
Rich Ristow
The body is the fodder and foil in Paul Guest's first collection, The Resurrection of the Body and the Ruin of the World. As the title suggests, poetry is an ambitious undertaking. Readers will not be disappointed with Guest's efforts. Muscular, stark, cool, original and biting, virtually every poem boasts a surprising thrust, a feast of description coupled with a quirky inverted logic. Open to any page and you'll find lines written with the intelligence and crafted ease of the young Frank O'Hara:
Walking to get medicine
for a pet, I am tempted
to speak of the flesh
a last time and fall silent
upon the subject,
as if sleep could claim
my mouth for its own
and close what I'd say
like a wound.
Guest reminds us, again and again, of the pleasures of a well-placed line break, and as with Rosal's work, music in the lines accounts for ongoing sonic pleasures. Each syllable offers something fresh to savor and read aloud.
Geography is not a physical region for Guest, but rather the orbit he paints in your head, the one that presumably exists in his. Bold enough to use "heart" and "stars" in a number of poems, he gets away with it by offering a convincing conduit between the two, a taut landscape as elastic as a rubber band. A reliable narrator, he gains the reader's trust early on. Therefore, you trust him on the subject of "the looming cruelty of stars," which are "the topography of false starts" where "a whole constellation is lousy with desire."
Guest's subjects are both familiar (heaven, hell and the heart that stops, love, pain) and the unusual (comic book characters, machinery). He packs them densely in discursive lines and stanzas. Because of the structure of his lines, (they rappel down the page), it's hard to do justice to any of them in brief examples, but here are just four lines from "In Case of Rapture,":
Something burning will go on
like a sadness and leave a dark soot
like a thumbprint on a throat.
Love's constant graffiti will be effaced.
Autobiography does play a role in Guest's poems, as in Lockwood's and Rosal's. In a few poems he uses his paralysis from a childhood accident as subject matter. Read as a collection, this information adds a level of poignancy to poems already thumping with energy and pathos. For example, from the opening lines of "Pinocchio": "Once I was wood and my heart was a knot./From a block my brain was slowly cut--/legs, arms, knees and nose, my all of me/peeked out at the prompt of father's blade."
Guest's poems have a sharp edge of dark humor. They bristle with the life of the mind, an echo of the role the mind plays in the work of Wallace Stevens, as he mines that field himself.
The Resurrection of the Body pitches headlong into Guest's signature tone with these lines from the first poem in the collection, "Melancholia":
Almost I rushed from home to tell you this:
that melancholia, the word, when broken
down to its roots, its ancient Greek particulars,
means black hole. How perfect. How yes,
I've been reading the dictionary again.
In a world where "pain grew like love," Guest gives us an unflinching view of the human condition rich with surprising contradictions. This is a sophisticated, erudite collection, all the more stunning because it is his first.
Elaine Sexton
Sunday, February 27, 2005
selection
EVOLUTIONARY POEM
A man who knows more than me is easy to find—
the papers are filled up with them
and so too the public airwaves
buzzing with coded sound, with compressed
image. And this one, this man
tells me, as though he were speaking
only to me, that we’re evolving
to eat mush. Of all mammals,
our teeth are the worst, weakest
because we grew thumbs, invented
javelins and sledgehammers and cudgels
and whatever was killed
was cooked soft over a fire,
something we did not much improve
until jellied napalm dropped
from the pregnant bellies of planes.
And mush is all I seem to eat
these days while the tv buzzes
its way through plot,
while the last iterations of winter pile up
outside my door
which is cold to touch
at night, which I opened last week
to find a small pile of change
and a red swath of vomit.
Never let it be said the universe deals
in anything but the inscrutable.
I imagined the grief
of the stranger
who leaned against the wall
and whatever poison worked inside them
and I imagined the shameful ease
that settled in them
when it was over
and though it casts me a fool
I thanked them for whatever
was in their pockets
which they left as a kind of apologetic pittance.
And I set to the grim
cleaning. What does one do
with a tiny windfall,
besides wash it repeatedly?
I bought coffee for a friend,
watched her stir in milk, sugar, cinnamon,
all the sweetnesses
so harmful to our mammalian teeth.
To her broken heart
I talked until
I too was empty
and whatever I left behind was not enough.
Still, these two repairs are promised by the doctors to be considerably more painful than last year's surgery. So I can't knock him too much.
***
I now have five job applications out there: Akron; New York City; Savannah; Edmond, Oklahoma; and one other that's slipping my mind right now. With any luck, no, with record floods of luck, I'll, you know, have a job this fall.
Look at that list of places: will write poems for food.
Talking to Eliot this week, he suggested a few career alternatives, one of which was being turned into dog food. I've added it to the list. Right after doorstop.
***
The Oscars are tonight. I'm all for Million Dollar Baby. I'd hoped to see The Aviator before tonight. Not that I care much, or will even be watching, necessarilly. Maybe.
Thursday, February 24, 2005
Tuesday, February 22, 2005
Fun with commas
***
One of my students called me 'Teach' the other day, which amused me. Now the whole class is. Ha ha.
***
Wrote a new poem called "Swallow." It's ok.
***
Too busy. Too too.
Monday, February 21, 2005
All this time
Let me suggest to you that this is less than a fun way to spend one's evening. The floor is hardwood; I now know where all the whorls, the knots, the rings that look like faces, both human and vaguely monster, are. I'm quite familiar with the imperfections in the paint job. And I'm a little sore from attempts at half-napping.
But, that said, it's no big deal, really. I survived, sanity intact. In my situation, these kinds of things happen. It's just part of the deal.
So, I trust everyone had a better Sunday evening?
Tuesday, February 15, 2005
I'm leaving on a jet plane
Monday, February 14, 2005
Thursday, February 10, 2005
Also
Amazingly
Anyone want a signed copy?
New Issues, why hast thou forsaken me?
And for some reason they've delayed announcing the winner of the Green Rose Prize until March 15th, the day after my birthday. Hmm.
***
I need help! It's too much to do job applications, manuscript submissions, and oh yeah, teach and grade.
Pro bono secretarial work, anyone?
Tuesday, February 08, 2005
Funned
Monday, February 07, 2005
B.C.
All that said, I'd love to go. I'm even supposed to read for Crazyhorse's anniversary reading. Rick was nudging me towards going today.
I need a patron! Or a windfall.
Advice? Suggestions?
Chi
So excited
Saturday, February 05, 2005
Tuesday, February 01, 2005
Today
***
Ordered out tonight: pancakes! I'm reminded of a fragment by Whitman on his wonderment over oranges shipped up from Florida. Of course, what wasn't a source of wonder for him?
***
Listening to: "Bring It On Home To Me," by Sam Cooke.
***
Tell me your good news.
