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A review by John Poch Remember that scene from The Jerk where Steve Martin's character is bankrupt and forced to leave his plush California estate? He says something like, "I don't need anything...well, except this paddle-game." But then he comes across another small object, like a pen. He admits he needs this pen, too. Then his favorite thermos, then a chair, a lamp, until we see this sensitive man misunderstood and rejected by the world (a poet?) standing on his front steps desperately clutching an array of seemingly unimportant objects. When you hold Chad Davidson's book in your hands, and you read these poems, you are holding a bunch of ordinary objects: a pear, a match, a starfish, a mushroom, a bra...but by the time he's revealed the thing for what it is, what you should have known all along, you don't want to let go. There is a sly wisdom in these poems about the things of this world as remarkable as what we find in Richard Wilbur. In fact, the lines are as well-wrought as Wilbur. Considering Davidson's authority, his ability to teach us so much fact, history, and trivia, we are reminded of the old standards: of Auden, Lowell, or Bishop. But the poems seem to have a contemporary sheen all their own. The introductory poem to the collection, "A," is clearly a touchstone by which the rest of the poems can be approached. This prose poem, like so many of Davidson's poems, has the clear made-ness of Amish clothing. The very fact of its simplicity, its black-and-white-ness (and some red stitching) helps us understand the hard work that goes into making such a thing. Instead of flashiness, we admire thread, buttons, dye, lines, punctuation, ink. We don't think, "Nice outfit." We think, "Someone living has sewn this with their very hands." Here's the second stanza:
Much the way Robert Hass's "Meditation at Lagunitas," says, yes, language doesn't exactly correspond to what we think it should, and good, Davidson's "A" immerses us in what it is like to be a reader for the first time, defamiliarizing, making a letter new, strange, sad, our nemesis and our very salvation. So many of Chad Davidson's poems return to the complaint of the failure of language (a sketchy ground on which to situate oneself as a poet). But mortal language, for Davidson, can't help but get resurrected. This theme is nothing new to contemporary poetry, but Davidson's diction and syntax is styled and lively. In the first few lines of "Cockroaches: Ars Poetica," poems might be foul but you have to admire their persistence: They know that death is merely of the body not the species, know their putrid chitin is always memorable. In "Bite Your Tongue," Davidson warns: Speak in tongues, but bite your tongue when you have spoken too much. As in Double Indemnity. My favorite line is shut up, baby: bold, recalcitrant boredom Even a yawn, seen at its most violent, is given a voice: I look in the mirror witness myself eating air, agasp, my daily chance to gaze into this face's oldest pain, more than some mute renegade wail, this tooth-jeweled grenade thrown out of the well again. And in "Boxes," a self-conscious double sonnet, we hear: Lazarus made whole again. A voiceover begins: It is late one April afternoon. A typical town by all respects. The church turns under a flight of clouds balloonlike. The boy who coaxes the balloon along hears his own voice then say rise, rise rise. The light flicks on. It's over. The boy is in his box. Here, language lives as Lazarus himself, as a balloon, as a boy, rising, yet back in the box at the end of the poem. But you think, not for long. Davidson's grammatical toolbox is open. Readers will notice the glut of conjunctions and transitional fragments that keep a poem swerving into new directions and then back onto the macadam. The imperative verbs demand a cinematic engagement with the reader: "Listen," "imagine," "bite," "take," and even "video." They steadily appear throughout the book. His use of the flat sentence amid stanzas of rich diction and syntax (stolen from Lowell) is arresting. Sentences and fragments like: "Boredom." "This is wrong." "Dido died." "I am a metaphor." "Take any page." "It is April." Yet, none of these techniques are overdone. And, really, when is the last time you fawned over a poet's splendid sentence variety? I have not mentioned the best poems in the collection: "Cleopatra's Bra," "The Match," "All the Ashtrays in Rome" and the powerful long lyric "Space." Each deserves a review for itself. All are poems for the next round of anthologies. Consolation Miracle is a mature collection (a minor miracle?) in a time when so many poets are settling for "poetry" or "the idea of a poem" rather than poems, when poets are praising artifice rather than art. It might be the strongest first book of poetry in the last ten years. If, for some reason, I were forced from my homealong with the family photos, and my pocketknife and my favorite coffee mugsomewhere in my arms would be my copy of this book. ____________ John Poch is Poetry Editor for 32 Poems. His first book, Poems, is forthcoming from Orchises Press. He teaches in the writing program at Texas Tech University. His poems have appeared in The Nation, The Yale Review, New England Review, Ploughshares, The Paris Review, and other journals. |
REVIEWS: Archived Femme au chapeau by Rachel Dacus interval by Kaia Sand My Father on a Bicycle by Patricia Clark The Mystery of Max Schmitt: Poems on the Life and Work of Thomas Eakins by Philip Dacey Poenix Rising: The Next Generation of American Formal Poets Sonny Williams, editor The North and South of It by Clarinda Harriss The Blue Dress by Alison Townsend Subject To Change by Marilyn Taylor Eve's Red Dress by Diane Lockward Consolation Miracle by Chad Davidson Poetry and Moral Vision: A Symposium by Ravi Shankar Good Heart by Deborah Keenan Oracle Figures by Eric Pankey The Lords of Misule by X.J. Kennedy Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest by B.H. Fairchild The Darkness and the Light by Anthony Hecht V: Waveson.nets, Losing L'una by Stephanie Strickland The Fields of Praise by Marilyn Nelson The Night Abraham Called to the Stars by Robert Bly The Water Between Us by Shara McCallum A Saturday Night at the Flying Dog by Marcia Southwick ESSAYS: The Problem of Originality by David Gewanter If you are interested in submitting a review of a recent book (within the past 3 years preferred) of poetry, please append to an e-mail or send to: Smartish Pace Reviews P.O. Box 22161 Baltimore, MD 21203 Poets and Publishers interested in having their book(s) reviewed are encouraged to send books to the above address. |
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