Poetry interlude

There’s usually poetry lying around my bed, but not read systematically. These are the key poetry books that passed through 2015, presented without much commentary, listed with what I most needed at the top.

Landscape with Rowers: Poetry from the Netherlands, ed. J.M Coetzee (Princeton University Press, 2005)

Fantastic collection of 20th century Dutch poetry, dual-language edition. (I couldn’t have named a single Dutch poet before this.) Sybren Polet’s anti-war “Self-Repeating Poem” was a stand-out.

La parti pris des choses (Gallimard, first published 1942) – Francis Ponge

Prose poems I always return to. The role of THINGS in our life, imagination. I especially love “Notes on a Shell”.

Nest (Kelsey Street Press, 2003) – Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge

Prose fragments, like listening to someone thinking out loud.

Ghosts! (Spuyten Duyvil, 2011) – Martine Bellen

An example of why I need poetry, although (or because) I don’t understand it. The pursuit of mystery.

Black Life (Wave Books, 2010) – Dorothea Lasky

Dottie Lasky is a witch/seer of the 21st century. (I aspire to this sort of witchdom.)

I tried to flatter myself into extinction; tried to bury alive in a landslide of disparagement ego and subjectivity and the first person singular pronoun. I ran identity to ground with the dogs of irony; I tried to kill, bury, burn, embalm, and erase the outlines of me, mummify myself in the damp wrappings of surrealism, sever and rearrange me with Stein’s cubisms, break, buy, bribe, drive a stake through me; tried to whip to death the whole frumpish horse-and-buggy, essentialist, runs-in-the-blood notion I had of who “I” was; like Stein I tried to bleed the bloody paragraph to death, killed the semicolon with the machete of my wit, tried to censor and edit, rewrite and emend me, my belief in lifeblood, marrow, core, and fiber; tried to swap my DNA at the DNA supermarket I read about in Philip K. Dick. So what is I still doing here? Why is I having to keep its eyes peeled? Its eye on the ball? Trying to steer by some dim star, that small, raw planet of self-loathing hammered into the night ahead? Why is I hauled forth over this choppy terrain like a tug on the rough boulevards of a black river? And by whom?

Lynn Emanuel, from Noose and Hook