Showing posts with label Finishing Line Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Finishing Line Press. Show all posts

Friday, 2 June 2017

Tucked Away: Dual Lives in David R. Altman’s “Death in the Foyer”

by JoAnn LoVerde-Dropp

For me, summers are for regrouping and re-reading favorite books.  One such work by David R. Altman, “Death in the Foyer,” continues to sink the plumb line of my appreciation for his attention to instinct and motive each time I read it.  “Death in the Foyer,” published by Finishing Line Press in 2014, is Altman’s debut chapbook. His website can be found at http://www.davidraltman.com.

“Death in the Foyer” contains a series of vignettes that convey the message nature may contain mysteries, but people keep secrets.

 The first of these is the book’s titular poem about a man who suddenly, and without resistance, succumbs to an aneurism in his home’s foyer. Altman’s use of an omniscient voice places the reader in an awkward position of knowing more than the dying man’s devoted wife whose “warm fingers [protect] now what no longer needs protecting.” 

Suddenly, the reader knows perhaps more than they should. Without warning, we’re in on it as the speaker divulges how, “his final thoughts were of wives and children;/and secret friends who knew him well,/thoughts that he will share now only with himself.”

And we know her, don’t we? This woman of “soft pleas” who emerges from “a living room landscape of family photos and dusty Bibles.” She is the hearth keeper; albeit, possibly not the first one as “wives” is unmistakably plural. 

I love this poem because every time I read the last stanza, I have to ask myself if I am obligated to care more about this man than the clearly ambivalent speaker. Altman writes,

            He was to die upon a rug he used to vacuum
            and had admired from a distance.
            Now moving toward a new life,
            less worldly than the one which at that instant he was leaving,
            but a new life, just the same.

We have to ask ourselves, what type of man (or woman, for that matter) sinks so comfortably into an “unexpected” death? Could it be one with “secret friends” suddenly offered a clean slate?  This negative capability allows the question to linger as long as we wish, as the dying man only “[moves] toward a new life” when we are ready.

More dramatic but equally compelling is the poem, “2:17 a.m.” Here, Altman carefully attends to setting, mood, and plot. We exist in both space and time, and the speaker uses the poem’s title and first line to create a sense of tension that does not dissipate even when the danger has passed.

Awakening to the sounds of destruction,
            the family presses one another to the hardwood
Unable to move or see or understand
            in one final act of unity they pray silently, hands touching.
Bullets fill the room, shattering photos and jewelry and bed posts
            While small children, life faceless rag dolls, curl beside their mother
Each family member pinned down like a spider beneath a jar
            waiting for the inevitable.

                                                Suddenly, things stop.

The crackling glass still rings as tires screech beyond shattered blinds.
            Quiet sobs fill the void
                        where gunfire had been.
The father sighs, his family safe, his home destroyed,
            His secrets so rudely revealed.
He peeks outside, in the dim light,
                   thinking only of how badly his grass needs cutting
                            and whether his house will ever be sold.

Here, the poem’s story is mirrored in its visual rhetoric. The first stanza consists of alternating but uniformly indented, end-stopped lines connoting order even in the midst of disaster.  It almost does not matter that a solitary line interrupts the terror in the night because the second stanza, with its craggy indents, betrays a father’s secret life.

While I personally find “Death in the Foyer” and “2:17 a.m.” two of the most intriguing poems in Altman’s first collection, this chapbook’s scope is far reaching.  He explores the lethal neutrality of animal instinct in the poems “Wake Up Call” and “Her Woods” in the same proportion as the will to live and love in “The Groom’s Mother Has Cancer.”

“Death in the Foyer” can be found on the Finishing Line Press website at https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/death-in-the-foyer-by-david-r-altman/.

JoAnn LoVerde-Dropp is a Lecturer in the English department at Kennesaw State University. JoAnn received her MFA in Creative Writing from Spalding University in Louisville, Kentucky. Her poetry has appeared in Gargoyle Magazine, Public.Replublic.net, and Bigger than They Appear: Anthology of Short Poems




Saturday, 22 August 2015

Review of Rhonda Pettit's FETAL WATERS


            FETAL WATERS

            by Rhonda Pettit



         Finishing Line Press, 2013
         ISBN: 9781622293933
         28 pages










________

I first met Rhonda Pettit at a monthly meeting of the Greater Cincinnati Writers League where she served as the poetry critic for the evening. She spoke of our poems in intuitive and comprehensive ways, posing questions that invited the poets to think about ways to deepen them. We both grew up and continue to live in Northern Kentucky, where we sometimes see each other at poetry readings, workshops, and writing retreats.  
Karen L. George
__________


Rhonda Pettit, Ph.D., is a poet, scholar, and amateur musician who teaches writing and literature at the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash College, where she is also editor of the Blue Ash Review. In addition to her chapbook Fetal Waters, and poetic drama The Global Lovers, she has published poems in online and print publications across the U.S. Currently at work on two manuscripts and a series of collages, she has been awarded writing fellowships to Hambidge Center, Hedgebrook, Hopscotch House, and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Her scholarship includes two books on the poetry and fiction of Dorothy Parker (A Gendered Collisionand The Critical Waltz), and articles about a range of poets and poems. She also served as a poetry editor for both volumes of the Aunt Lute Anthology of U. S. Women Writers.

__________

Review of Rhonda Pettit's Fetal Waters

The poems in Rhonda Pettit's poetry chapbook, Fetal Waters, examine personal memory within a larger historical context, dealing with subjects such as faith/doubt, connection/disconnection, the duality and inequalities of life, and such issues as segregation, racism, war, and the sex trade. The poems are infused with rhythm and music. They ask important questions, yearn for answers and understanding, and resonate with compassion.

Water in its many forms, literal and metaphorical, permeates Fetal Waters, beginning with the opening whimsical poem, "Cirrus." Pettit selects her words with great care, creating repeated vowel and consonant sounds that result in lilting internal rhyme that invites the reader into her way of looking at and thinking about the world around her. The imagery and soft sounds are hypnotizing:

            snips from a pale spool
            a silver stitch

            lisp of a faint direction
            a whim, a wink

            a willowing hush        
            buss on a blue cheek

Even the poem's form mimics the lightness of the subjectcouplets of short lines not reaching halfway across the page. The poet draws us into this first poem, and thus the whole book, by the intimacy she achieves through her use of the second person: "Even your name is a whisper / your lightness less // than a feather." The line near the center of the poem, "a wisp of gathering to come," spoke to me of possibilities—"gathering" literal and symbolic, as in the opportunity for life, the very beginnings of life, especially in view of what follows itthe second and title poem, "Fetal Waters," in which the poem's persona imagines being a fetus, floating in the amniotic waters. "Fetal Waters," is also written in couplets (only three) with short lines. Here is the poem in its entirety:

            A keen sense of fulfilling,
            but no waves for now.

            It is quiet, it is calm,
            little bones

            a stone's toss away
            from pony time.

The internal rhyme of "bones" "stone's" adds power to the poem, a sense of momentum building. The theme of possibility from the first poem is echoed here as well, succinctly and evocatively, in the line "A keen sense of fulfilling" and "pony time," referencing the impending birth and all there is to unfold in that new life over time. But don't be deceived into thinking all the poems are going to be "quiet" and "calm." The subject matter and tension deepens and darkens the further in we go, as if walking into a swimming pool from the shallow into the deep end. The poet suggests that in the phrase "but no waves for now." The "for now" subtly and yet powerfully hints that there will be waves in the future.

These waves are introduced in the third poem of the chapbook, "Baptism," where the ideas of belief and trust and being part of a congregation are pondered and questioned. The poem opens with the lines:

            She knew she was supposed to believe
            in something, but what other than
            the wetness ascending her legs?
            That the minister's grip could be
            trusted? That salvation would not
            have its sting?

The above lines introduce us to the poet and/or the poems' personas' questioning what they observe, what they are expected to believe and blindly accept, as seen in the following lines of "Baptism":

                              ...Close your eyes,
            he whispered, tilting her back and down,
            but she left them open to see the face
            of God. It blurred into anger and
            absence as she rose, a wave crashing
            on a shore of air, the congregation
            mute and obedient as angels.

This poem also uses contrasting words, images, and ideas, as many of the poems do, creating a sense of life's duality.  In this poem she pairs "salvation" and "sting," "open" and "closed," uncertainty and blind faith. This image of keeping her eyes open echoes throughout the poems in examining the world in which she lives. In the poem "Avenues" it's seen in the ending lines "Almost religious / what we don't know."

The central eight poems in "Fetal Waters" deal with racism centered on a segregated swimming pool. In the poem "1963," Pettit effectively repeats the line "what did I know?" as she observes the Negro boy her own age (eight) who was "not allowed in," who she says "watched from the other side / of the swimming pool fence...topped with barbed wire."

The poem's ending image of "the sun / glaring from water and concrete, / blinding us all" is an effective image that mirrors the unwillingness of people at that time to see the truth, either actively endorsing or blindly following segregation and racist beliefs and attitudes. This image of blindness brought me back to the poem "Baptism" in which the poet's eyes are open, and the irony of those baptismal waters washing away sin, and the suggestion that these swimming pool waters need to be kept uncontaminated.

This duality of who is allowed in and who is kept out, via the image of the barbed wire fence continues in the next poem, "The Steps," in which Pettit writes: "Your parents had paid for the key / that unlocked the gate and let you / in." She effectively uses contrasting imagery to describe the fence: 
            ...When you slammed the gate shut,
            it rattled the chain-link fence into song,        
            a peeling of flat, airy bells, and wobbled
            the barbed wire above it, a tone
            too low to be heard.

The image of the fence creating a high lovely sound ("like bells") rubs up against the image of the barbed wire on top of the fence emitting "a tone too low to be heard," which results in a tension that runs through this and the other poems in the sequence.

She describes entering the "whites-only pool":
            Heads would rise to see
            if you belonged here—a heaven of water
            in the midsummer hell of the sixties,
            ghettos and streets and lives on fire,
            America's racial napalm
            everywhere but here.

            You belonged here,
            wading in water you knew
            to be pure...

Again the poet uses contrasting images of "heaven" and "hell," "water" and "fire" to represent the divide between her protected world in the "whites-only pool" and the riots going on. Again, she suggests the idea of the pool's water being uncontaminated, "pure" because only whites were allowed in. The phrase "You belonged here" is repeated three times almost like an incantation, or as if the poet is trying to convince herself of the fact and the correlating one—that blacks didn't belong there. How ironic it is that while she's swimming in this "whites-only pool" she hears the song "Ball of Confusion" on the radio. The song is not only sung by black singers, but it contains lines about people's actions due to "the color of their skin." I get a sense that the song's title reflects the young girl's state of mind concerning the issue of segregation.

In the poem "Swim Lessons" boundaries and the idea of what divides us is presented as the "rope dividing heaven from hell" — the shallow water from the deep end. She and the others learning to swim must venture over the border:

            To cross it and our fear of being
            sucked down to oblivion, we'd have to
            survive immersion, allow ourselves to be
            surrounded by substance both like us
            and foreign.

The above lines work on the literal level of the girl's swim lessons, but they also, in the context of the other poems in this sequence, speak of the future—in particular of when segregation will no longer be legal, but many other crossings of symbolic borders and being "immersed" and "surrounded" by unfamiliar situations she must discover her own way through. This poem where she is compelled to trust the lifeguard calls to mind the earlier poem "Baptism" (another immersion) where she wonders if "the minister's grip could be / trusted?"

The poem "The Night Swimmers" is a persona poem, written in the opposing collective point-of-view of an anonymous "we" who the reader quickly realizes are black kids who wait until night, when the whites-only pool is closed, to sneak into it. The barbed wire fence they climb over is described as: "each barb a star, / a stick-angel guarding heaven." The poem continues with the following lines:

                                     ...Into the water
            we ease, the water saying nothing, giving way,
            refusing to give us away...

These lines so beautifully portray "the heaven" of being in the water, this "privilege" that they're immersing themselves into. The exquisite image of "the water saying nothing" and water "giving way," suggests that this water (and all that water symbolizes—birth, life, purity, wholeness, etc) is indeed meant for everyone.

In the last two poems of the sequence, "The Fill" and "The Fence," the pool is "filled in...bulldozed and backhoed, / pounded and busted, shoved and hauled." The poet ends "The Fill" by saying that with the debris was buried:

the woods on either side and behind
            the silence of the night swimmers
            the joy, the fear, the holding on
            the conversations never held
            the questions never asked
            the desire for order
            the one way
            in and out:

all,
            all part of the fill.

The form of the above lines creates the image of things being sucked into a vortex which suggests the image created in the poem "The Steps" by the mention of the song "Ball of Confusion." It feels as if the poem is a lament for not only the poet's personal history (her memories) being buried, but that time in history as well. 

In the last poem of the sequence "The Fence," she describes the fence as being "like bones, / like the skeleton of memory," that it "bore the weight of bodies / kept in, kept out." This duality and the image of borders that divide us is echoed in the later lines: "For twenty years it [the fence] had whispered / yes and no, black and white." The poem and the sequence end with an intriguing reversal in the following two stanzas:  

            Now we can't walk
            on what once was water
            without risking a twisted ankle
            in a sinkhole.

            We must walk
            heads bowed, eyes down,
            as if we didn't belong there.

Now, even the "whites" have lost their privilege, as it were, to swim in the water. Now they no longer belong. The last two lines, while working on a literal level of keeping their gaze down so as not to stumble, can also be seen to infer a sense of shame ("heads bowed, eyes down") for the part played in belonging to the segregated pool.

Several of the poems delve into the issue of sex slavery. In "O, Fledgling" Pettit laments over the fact that there are "girls sold // because they are ten ten ten / here and // elsewhere." The repetition in the phrase "ten ten ten" effectively emphasizes the poet's incredulity and outrage. "Enfant Terrible," a haunting persona poem written from the point-of-view of a woman forced to work in a brothel, opens with the stanza:

            After their bodies,
            one by sweaty one,
            collapse onto mine in the brothel, they walk away
            mistaking relief for freedom.

The poet creates this woman's powerful response to these men and the life she was forced into living by the woman imagining she has impregnated these men:

            They do not know
            they must mother me now.
            I have made these men pregnant
            with their secret.
            I am

           the secret
           they carry like a nine-pound fetus—
           unavoidable
           unabortable
           never born.


Pettit creates a potent image of reversal in the lines above, giving us a chilling sense of this woman's imagined power, her anger, her need for revenge—which heightens our perception of her underlying sadness and desperation.

Pettit delves into the violence of war in several poems, such as "Instruments of War" where she describes a newspaper photograph of a guitar among the dead at a battle scene. She asks the chilling question:


            Which one of the dead
            was the soldier troubadour    
            who might have sung of love and beauty
            and justice, all the same note?  How many
            had he killed in spite of this
            before an ambush found
            him off-beat?

In the poem "O, Fledgling" she laments "child soldiers, mutilated women;" in "Mother the Stranger" a man once loved "left the city for war / whose bones make soil / for the desert;" and in "The Transposition Blues" there are unsettling images of "The child who lost/ an arm carries a rifle" and "In the mass grave / a blue shirt on bones."

Pettit encapsulates one of the overriding sensibilities of this collection—a sense of incomprehension, helplessness, and compassion in view of things she terms as "the earth's sadnesses" in the moving elegy "O, Fledgling." She finds a dead bird near her porch, which dredges up the many other sadnesses we're faced with in this world. The poem ends with the following haunting couplets:

                ...I might have put
            the lost
       
            one in its nest, but late, I went
            to work

            instead, running and responsible.
            Grounded.      

            O, Ovid. O, Bruehel. O, Auden. O,
            mean life.

One of the many things I admire is the way Pettit uses words to suggest several meanings, such as in her above use of the word "running," which literally means she's hurrying to get to work, but it also suggests that she is "running" from the reality of this "lost one," and the realization plus frustration that she can do so little about it or the other sadnesses in this world. She does the same thing with the word "Grounded," emphasizing the word "responsible" on the line before it—the narrator telling herself that she is only being a well-balanced, sensible person—and yet the other meaning of "grounded," as in "an airplane is grounded" gives us the sense of the opposite of "running," of being put out of action, which mirrors the image of the fledgling brought down.

Besides poems in Fetal Waters resonating with each other through the imagery of water, many also connect through Pettit's imagery of the natural world. In "The Calling" she lyrically describes the way mountains change and are preserved: "Mathematical and mystical, /they ride the plates, thrust and erode from within, / sending boulder, cobble, gravel downstream and seaward / until I think they are gone, confusing / their presence with memory." And later, she dedicates a poem to a housefly, something most people deem innocuous. In "Musca domestica" she returns to the theme of life 's duality, speaking of the house fly's "invisible feculent trails" and yet also describes it as "small, dark, so distinct and delicate / you almost look clean," and says, "I envy / the authority // with which you land, / observing the mute, minute particulars, / taking the world on your own terms."

The collection ends with the beautiful and wise poem "Something about Us," where Pettit describes one Queen Anne's Lace flowering along a highway, using it as an image mirroring ourselves. She asks:

            How did it survive the blade,
            or did the mower loop around it
            nearly grinning? Or is it the first
            to return, uncowed, inspired by the violence
            used to tidy the land? It knows
            something about us.

Again, in the lines above there is the element of duality, of seemingly incongruous elements—this Queen Anne's Lace flourishing "amid concrete and asphalt, steel / and carbon monoxide," portrayed as not only "uncowed," but "inspired by the violence / used to tidy the land."

The poem and the collection end with:

                                           ... its tiny
            clustered blossoms open
            my window

            where looking out
            is looking in.

What power lies in her suggestion that one lone flower can "open / my window," which creates the image of the poet opening her window to look more closely at the Queen Anne's Lace, but also that one small object can open us, deepen our awareness to the power of beauty and growth and resilience, and the reminder that we, too, are tough, that we too can hopefully survive the world's violence. The ending image of this window, again one of duality, "where looking out / is looking in," establishes our connection to the natural world, and suggests the idea of mirroring—of examining what we see in the world and reflecting on it—in effect, coming to a place of balance. This "looking out" and "looking in" also echoes the repeated themes of inclusion and exclusion of the segregated pool series of poems central to the book.

Rhonda Pettit's chapbook, Fetal Waters, swims with beauty and violence as she seamlessly blends her personal memories and other personas' imagined experiences into the historical events of her time, naming the world's inequalities and injustices, but always with compassion and clarity. These poems vibrate with tenderness and tension—the friction between how we connect and disconnect as people—and a keen sense of yearning for what we've lost, what we might yet hold, and what we will perhaps discover in ourselves and our world.        

___________________________________________________

Karen George retired from computer programming to write full-time. She lives in Florence, Kentucky, and enjoys traveling to historic river towns, mountains, and Europe. She is author of Into the Heartland (Finishing Line Press, 2011), Inner Passage (Red Bird Chapbooks, 2014), Swim Your Way Back (Dos Madres Press, 2014), and The Seed of Me (Finishing Line Press, 2015). You can find her work in Louisville Review, Tupelo Press 30/30 Project, Wind, Permafrost, qarrtsiluni, and Still. She holds an MFA from Spalding University, and is co-founder and fiction editor of the journal, Waypoints. Visit her website: http://karenlgeorge.snack.ws/

Monday, 19 May 2014

SURRENDER by Ellen Birkett Morris





SURRENDER

by Ellen Birkett Morris 

Finishing Line Press, 2012

ISBN: 9781622290772

28 pages
http://www.finishinglinepress.com/


__________

I've never met Ellen Birkett Morris, but I'd heard her name as a fellow Kentucky writer. When she emailed to ask if she could send me a copy of her poetry chapbook for review, I accepted her invitation.

Karen L. George

__________

Review of Ellen Birkett Morris' Surrender

Ellen Birkett Morris writes poetry, fiction and short plays from her home in Louisville, Kentucky. Her fiction has appeared in Antioch Review, Sawmill Magazine, South Carolina Review, NotreDame Review, and Santa Fe Literary Review. Her story, “The Cycle of Life and Other Incidentals,” was selected as a finalist in the Glimmer Train Press Family Matters short story competition. Her ten-minute play, “Lost Girls,” was a finalist for the 2008 Heideman Award given by Actors Theatre of Louisville and was given a staged reading at the Aronoff Center in Cincinnati. Morris is the author of Surrender, a poetry chapbook from Finishing Line Press. Her poetry has appeared in journals including Thin Air Magazine, Clackamas Literary Review, Alimentum, Juked, Inscape, and Gastronomica. Her work won top poetry prize in The Binnacle Ultra-Short Edition in 2008 and was Semi-finalist for Rita Dove Poetry Award. Her poem, "Origins," was nominated for the 2006 Pushcart Prize. Morris has received grants from the Elizabeth George Foundation, Kentucky Foundation for Women and Kentucky Arts Council. She is a recipient of a 2013 Al Smith Fellowship for her fiction given by the Kentucky Arts Council. Morris works as a public relations consultant and writes regularly for www.authorlink.com.


 The poems in Ellen Birkett Morris' debut poetry chapbook, Surrender, resonate with the emotional intensity of longing, compassion, tenderness, and reverence around the many types of surrender we experience inevitably as humans. The poems move from childhood through adulthood, using various forms (tercets, quatrains, prose poems), held together by common tones and themes such as love, loss, and reverence for our roots. 

The opening poem, "Everything Must Go," refers to the sign at a garage sale. The narrator describes one item for sale:  "The electric blue bathing suit / hangs from a post." The poem has a wistful, nostalgic mood set by the image "The chest juts out, a trick of wind / or padding," and how the narrator imagines the teen who once wore the swimsuit: "...open / face, honeyed braids, long legs, her bare / feet with toenails painted pink." The poet also invites us deeper with the phrase "inviting me / to look at what others had cast aside." "Cast aside" refers literally to getting rid of this old item of clothing, but also hauntingly suggests people, places, and things outgrown, rejected, or surrendered to through the years. The title, "Everything Must Go," foreshadows the stories of loss and letting go in the poems that follow, by implying that eventually everything in life must go. The poem's sense of longing is intensified by the repeated long "a,"  "e," and "o" sounds that make the reader wonder what memories this garage sale has churned up in the narrator.

Morris writes about some of the surrenders many experience as teens:  in "Sixteen" surrendering to an awakening of sexual desire, and in "Down by the Lake" where kids surrender to getting high.

In "Surrender," the title poem of the book, the narrator surrenders her daughter to the school bus, feeling "invisible," her "white T-shirt a flag of surrender. / Surrendered to love, / I leave my daughter at the curb." And this image of the mother sending her daughter off is beautifully paired with the reverse image at the end of the poemher daughter waving to her mother "as she sends me off into the world."

This connection of a mother to a daughter is also the subject of the prose poem, "Measurements," in which a daughter remembers how her mother hand-measured ingredients, and "When the time came, she taught me her tricks. No shiny measuring cup could match the glory of my mother's words as I dropped my first handful of flour into the bowl. Perfect. Just perfect."

The poems "The Movies" and "Louisville, KY, USA" celebrate the surrender involved in romantic love. "The Movies" ends beautifully with two people who have been in a relationship for many years we suspect, coming home from a movie and making love. The poet portrays them as totally comfortable with each other, snuggling:

                         ...We lay in our warm bed, sheets
            soft with age, and watched the leaves cast
            shadows on the bedroom wall.

There is such comfort and tenderness in the image of "sheets soft with age," because besides being literal it suggest the couple's relationship has softened as it matured.  The last image of leaf shadows can be interpreted as both beautiful and at the same time a foreshadowing perhaps of darker times that come into everyone's life, which will be dealt with in later poems.

"Louisville, KY, USA" also has the same wistful, drowsy feel of the "The Movies," of two people who have lived and loved together for many years, waking together "in our familiar bed, / warm with Saturday sleep." This poem also portrays the narrator's surrender or acceptance of the fact that her partner is aging, as she is, by referring to "your gray chest hair...wrinkles around your eyes," and the lovely ending line, "we lie together slowing." The "together slowing" suggests both the image of their heart rates slowing after lovemaking, and the idea of slowing down in other ways as a result of aging.

The chapbook's central theme of surrender is carried in poems of loved ones as they age, become ill, and die. In "Your Mother" the poem's narrator asks her husband to tell her about his mother. The poem is written in second person, addressing the husband as "you," which creates a lovely sense of intimacy between the poem's characters, but also between the narrator and the reader, and the husband and his aging mother who's in a nursing home. At the poem's center is the haunting image of "old people propped this way or that, / like brooms in a closet, waiting to be chosen." This is such an effective image because as sad as it is to envision these people doing nothing but waiting to die, "waiting to chosen" also suggests to me a kind of hope, that they've lived their lives and are ready to move on to the next phase, whatever that might be. And brooms also denote something useful and essential, perhaps alluding to the fact that these nursing home residents the poet describes as "smiling, sad-eyed or dreaming" have moved pat their years of having a purpose. "Your Mother," as so many other poems in Surrender,is filled with tenderness and reverence for our roots, the places and people who have nourished us, as seen in the second stanza:

            How you brushed her long grey hair.
                        Then held up a mirror, smiling,
                                    As she once did for you.

This tenderness accompanied with sadness continues in the poem "Leaving," in which the husband empties "his boyhood home." The poem ends with lines full of longing emphasized by the repeated use of the consonant "l":

            The fall light is filled with golden dust,
            dried leaves, ash, the yellow of goodbye.

The "yellow of goodbye" mirrors the mother's tea roses of the preceding lines, which the poet says were "started with a cutting / from her mother's garden." This image is both beautiful and sad in itself, but I also wondered if the husband and wife in this poem took any cuttings of the roses, to keep the tradition going, and since that's never mentioned in the poem, that omission intensified the poem's sadness for me. The poem takes place in the fall of the year, which also echoes what the reader feels is the impending death of the mother. At the poem's center the wife surrenders to letting her husband surrender to the experience of emptying his mother's house, lines that effectively use repetition:

                                                I ache to touch
            my husband, but leave him to his leaving.

Surrender contains a series of poems in which the narrator deals with the loss and letting go of her fatherone of the most difficult kinds of surrender we experience as humans. In "Your Last Day" she describes his death in the moving last four lines:

          ...felt free to go. Two hours later
            you gave a final exhalation.
            It was a sigh, really.

            A sigh.
The way the above lines are laid out on the page, each one shorter, creates a winding-down effect visually that mirrors the father's last breaths, that though certainly sad, also contains a beauty, a peacefulness echoed in the repeated "sigh." The poet's use of the word "sigh" is an example of how much a poet can pack in one word, because sighing, letting one's breath out audibly, can suggest sorrow, weariness, regret or relief. People sigh with yearning, or in response to someone or something beautiful, such as a work of art or music. The word "sigh" also echoes back to the chapbook's title, Surrender, as in letting go of breath, in this case the father's final breath, in which the poet also masterfully suggests (without saying it) the daughter's accompanying sigh.

In both "Fatherless Girls" and "Hollow Bones" the daughter of the poem speaks to her recently deceased father in second person, addressing him as "you," again creating a breathtaking feeling of intimacy. In "Fatherless Girls" the daughter imagines heat lightning as "Those small fires you set just to say hello," and in "Hollow Bones" she muses that if her father had "hollow bones" like a crow:

                                             ...I could lift you from your bed
            Carry you outside to feel the sun
            See the clouds drift across the sky
            Watch the shadows lengthen

The very next line in "Hollow Bones," that follows the above image of rising and light is one of falling and darkness: "But you fall into a darkness I cannot penetrate." This poem, as others in the book, effectively use contrasting images of light and darkness. This poem, as many others, also establishes the poet's connection and appreciation of the natural world and its cycles which echo human life cycles. For example, in the elegiac poem "August Leaves" the narrator walks by a lake, remembering her father. The opening lines contain lilting sounds of repeated consonants, making it sound like both a dirge and a lullaby:

            August leaves
            Singed around the edges
            Slow baked by summer sun
            Float in the air
            Land in the quarry lake
            I pace the shallow water

Lines like the above emphasize the duality of life, how sometimes opposing sensations are intricately connectedjoy and sorrow, pain and beautyespecially at times such as the death of a parent, when we're most vulnerable and yet these times are often when we grow the most as humans.

The theme of reverence for your ancestry, first introduced in the second poem, "Measurements,"  carries through the book in poems such as "Detroit Skyline," "Oxblood," "Man Without a Country," and "Stones in My Pocket." In "Oxblood" the narrator's memory of one of her ancestors, perhaps a grandfather, is brought back by "the mention of shoe polish." She remembers his "wooden / caddy. The bristled brush...tins of polish, the deep red / my favorite. Oxblood...The soft clothes like diapers." These concrete images of sight, sound, and smell ground the poem and bring it alive, present to the senses much in the same way objects such as old photos can bring back people, places, and events as if they were present.  "Detroit Skyline" is just such a poem based on a photograph:

                        You look straight into the camera,
                        squinting against the sun, hair blown
                        by the wind, the Detroit skyline behind you.
                        You are eight. The city is king.
                        Summer afternoons are endless.

The simplicity of the last two above lines are so powerful, creating a staccato effect that echoes the starkness of the city behind the "you" in the photograph, suggesting the "head-on" way he experiences life.

In this chapbook's second last poem, "Stones in My Pocket," the narrator travels to the land of her ancestors:

                                                            ...My father gone but a year,
                        I go in search of ghosts, track his namesake across the water.
                        The journey of seven hours took my people seven weeks
                        In a famine ship.

The connection to the past, and reverence for her ancestors continues into the narrator's own imagined future in the poem's beautiful closing lines:           
  
                        I can only hope that someone from the future
                        Will seek my name on a gravestone,
                        Look out at the land, imagine me there,
                        Feel the wind on her face like the breath
                        Of a loved one as he leans in for one last kiss.

This image of "one last kiss" hauntingly mirrors the mother's kiss in "Your Mother" and the breath of the father in "August Leaves" and "Tour Last Day."

The last poem, "Inheritance," goes back in time to the couple's wedding day, and a later realization of what they inherited:  "The deep strain of melancholy / that runs through our genes." This poem and the book ends with the following haunting image that echoes back to other mentions of shadows in earlier poems such as "The Movies":

                        As a shadow staggers in the doorway
                        Returned not to celebrate or mourn,
                        But to curse the day we were born.

This image is a powerful contrast to the poem's preceding image of joy and promise of the wedding celebration: "Drunk with abundance, weaving / Arm in arm to the music we sway" a fitting end to a book full of life's dualities and dichotomies:  love and loss, abundance and illness, birth and death, connection and disconnection.

Ellen Birkett Morris' Surrender draws us into places, times, and spaces splendid with the beauty of the natural world, entangled by the surrenders of our lives as humans, luminous with yearning, tenderness and awe.

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 Karen George lives in Northern Kentucky. Since she retired from computer programming to write full-time, she has enjoyed traveling to historic river towns, mountain country, and her first European trip. Her chapbook, Into the Heartland, was released by Finishing Line Press in 2011, and her chapbook, Inner Passage, is forthcoming from Red Bird Chapbooks. You can find her  work in Memoir, The Louisville Review, Tupelo Press 30/30 Website, Wind, Border Crossing, Permafrost, Blast Furnace, Adanna, and Still. She is co-founder and fiction editor of the online literary and arts journal, Waypoints.