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Moving Picture

by David Cazden
WordTech Communications
ISBN 1932339108
Reviewed by Cheryl Snell
David Cazden's aptly titled new book, Moving Picture, is grounded in daily life closely observed. The book is divided in four sections that follow on with thematic integrity,...

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  • cherylsnell
      • Rated 5 stars

    Moving Picture

    by David Cazden
    WordTech Communications
    ISBN 1932339108
    Reviewed by Cheryl Snell
    David Cazden's aptly titled new book, Moving Picture, is grounded in daily life closely observed. The book is divided in four sections that follow on with thematic integrity, the poems lush, rich with texture and imagery; they focus on the personal and back away again into the larger world, balancing fragile human interactions against nature. In Sunstroke, the speaker’s mate faints and he says, “and I held your head / as if it were a huge blossom.” And in Cemetery Photo Shoot
    I looked above the camera,
    rising closer, as if to kiss her.

    She shrunk back, eyes falling
    among the blackberries.
    The camera’s strap

    swung from my arm
    and the whole day unwound
    across the headstones
    In a voice at once contemporary and lyrical, the poet presents crafted language about experience both fully entered and briefly glimpsed. Intimate as a photograph in black and white, each piece gains psychological and poetic heft through well -considered poetic devices. In Jazz Days, Cazden riffs on romance with short, sharp lines that bring up the way

    a jagged trumpet intrudes,
    twists like a sunfish
    in late afternoon waves.
    Soon, the couple imagines

    we’re sailing on Charlie Parker’s
    wind-powered vessel,
    cutting the dark notes
    to a far shore.
    Sensory experience distilled into lean graceful lines studded with startling images abound in the poems on geometry, cooking, massage, soap: a barista’s five inches of bared hips is “a stretch of warm beach/with nothing but wishes/ holding them up,” a cat’s claws “invisible and slim/ as wires of November rain.” A woman runs, her “legs making long crosses/against the satin virburnum.”
    At the heart of Cazden’s work a prayerful voice can be heard, gentle and melancholy, aware of the proximity of death to life, that “Each summer breaks its promise.” At the sight of a cancer survivor’s scar in Melanoma, he says
    This is the opposite
    of what a kiss might do,
    an unraveling of flesh,
    the threads sewn down.

    She stares at me through glasses
    thick as bowls of water.
    At twenty five she already talks
    beyond the afternoon. And after

    our awkward conversation
    I return to editing her poem,
    erasing a few lines,
    as if my hand could change
    a story not my own.

    With that sure hand, David Cazden has given us lyrics that reflect and enrich. He is the author of one chapbook, The Joy of Cooking School, and is the Poetry Editor for Miller’s Pond Magazine.



    cherylsnell wrote this review Monday, December 17 2007. ( reply | permalink ) Was this review helpful? Yes | No
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