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cherylsnell

cherylsnell

I am the author of six poetry chapbooks: FLOWER HALF BLOWN (Finishing Line Press), EPITHALAMION (Little Poem Press) SAMSARA (Pudding House Publications), and MULTIVERSE (GOSS183), PRISONER'S DILEMMA, which Prisoner's Dilemma won the 2008 chapbook competition sponsored by Lopside Press, and Memento Mori (Scattered Light). My novel, SHIVA’S ARMS... more »
  • MD, USA
  • member since September 13 2007

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Displaying 11-12 of 12 reviews
  • Zero Degrees at First Light
    • Rated 5 stars

    Zero Degrees at First Light
    by Christine Potter
    David Robert Books
    ISBN: 1933456442, 80 pages, $17.00
    Reviewed by Cheryl Snell
    Christine Potter’s is a collection of poems that takes nothing for granted. Her voice, experienced and clear, can also be vulnerable and unsettled. She tells us about life--about moving into a 200 year- old house, teaching with laryngitis, an encounter with The Crazy Old Lady Who Lives Across the Street. Her narratives and meditations, many written with extended, refracted lines, observe the common scene until the universal reveals itself anchored to a particular moment, supported by insights arrived at organically.
    Many of these pieces are filtered through an almost elegiac tone. We watch Potter walk the tightrope of our times with heightened awareness that the next moment may change everything. “How quiet/we are, lost in the complicated normalcy of whatever is changing around us, /whatever is endlessly saying goodbye.” (Last Warm Night on the Patio at the Italian Restaurant)
    She sometimes pinpoints presence becoming absence with images of disappearing:
    The roof line of your grandparents’ house
    fades to cobalt, to indigo, and disappears in the night
    like a round stone dropped in deep water. (To My Husband, Who Dreamed of Tidal Waves as His Father Was Dying)

    And, in this poem about grief:
    …The best is like waiting for snow
    all day: see it begin, see the most tender
    flakes dissolve in a creek that barely moves.
    Soon enough, everything else just disappears.” (Talking to Beethoven, 1967)
    The relationship between nature and self is explored with appreciation and respect. Images of light and sound from the physical world often connote the fluidity of escape, a sense of vacancy, a poignant lack.
    So it all tumbles apart after an hour or two of watching:
    splashes of blue tangled in clouds, the stars
    bleached out, hidden under day, invisible as inner rooms
    of a neighbor’s house. Everything but light lies. (To My Husband, Who Dreamed of Tidal Waves as His Father Was Dying)
    and:
    “It’s someone’s wedding veil, that light over the brook—

    and how fast water moves under the footbridge,
    its strange, loud brilliance.” (Sleeping in an Empty House)
    These lines, grounded in nature, open out into a statement of faith--
    “ …You believe in exactly what comes tomorrow:
    bright, harmless fog that clouds the windows
    as if something enormous had breathed upon them--
    mercy that’s blind, and steady as time.” (Tornado Warnings After Dinner With Your Family in Indiana)
    Attention is the faculty that Simone Weil called “the very substance of prayer.” These poems attend to the senses, drawing us in with images that are precise, startling and evocative. Potter wends her way back in time and forward in psychological space, and an unknown place—the 200 year old house, for instance—begins to give up its secrets. “We haven’t seen the single, perfect beam, half-covered with bark/ and marked with the swing of a forgotten axe/ that still supports the kitchen.” In “To My Husband, Who Dreamed of Tidal Waves as His Father Was Dying,” the movement of time pushes us to think about the departures and arrivals in our own lives. “You and I have not arrived, yet. Your father/has just been born, and the story of what will happen next/is taking a breath before it can go on.” Eliot says, “Every phrase and every sentence is an end and a beginning,” and Potter comes to her conclusions patiently, all the while condensing and distilling the perceptions she gathers.
    The poet’s contemplative tone doesn’t exclude joy or humor. Her subjects are not constrained by the form in any of her more traditional poems. She has a modern style inclusive of traditional elements and the poems are accessible, with no forced rhymes, meanings that are subtle and resonant. The following sonnet’s simplicity yields a complex emotional center:
    On the Closing of Ichi-Riki, Nyack, NY (Where I Have Eaten For Twenty Years)

    When dining on sashimi seemed as dear
    as ninety-minute phone calls, out of state,
    to boyfriends I should never have gone near,
    I came here anyway and cleaned my plate

    of everything except that spikey herb,
    the garnish, near the ginger and wasabi--
    but since I'm older, I am undisturbed
    by doomed relationships, my former hobby.

    Now I can order toro without guilt
    and easily afford to pay the bill,
    this restaurant's closing and my youth is spilt.
    Epiphany at last; I feel its chill:

    time's passage is the most expensive dish,
    a truth in life and love--and in raw fish.
    The final couplet briskly brings the details in this richly textured picture to a satisfying close.
    “Hundreds of people can talk for one who can think, but thousands can think for one who can see,” Ruskin once said. A sense of recognition and renewal is evident in the poet’s reach toward the metaphysical. The war poems recall the blurring of vision often examined in Denise Levertov’s war poems.
    6:40 AM, Just Before the War

    It's always been January,
    salt blown like tired snow to the curb,
    sky salt-colored but for frostbitten pink
    toward the East, in the squeaking cold.

    The sun rises battened under thick clouds,
    indifferent to day as someone who flicks on a light
    in an empty room. He’s forgotten the name

    of the people who live downstairs,
    and doesn’t believe Spring will ever come.
    He pulls a grey sweater over his head,
    just to hear static crack in the wool.

    I used to know him, but not anymore.
    On television, the President keeps speaking
    and speaking about queasy possibility. I wait
    for the blizzard I dreamed of last week,

    but it doesn’t matter; they always load the planes
    in January. Already, the war correspondents
    comb their hair in hotel mirrors,
    too tired for reason, the winter too far gone.
    My favorite poem from this luminous collection is an affirmation of a basic truth--being alive embraces both pain and joy. This is one of the strengths of Potter’s poetry: her vision of the temporary and dangerous nature of life coupled with a deep appreciation for that life. To tell us about it is her job as a poet, and she does it very well.
    Conjoined Twins

    In Pennsylvania, there are two sisters in their forties
    who declined surgery and have lived like light
    through a glass of water: perfectly transparent,
    containing each other. I wonder about traffic
    passing their street, the solitary drivers listening
    to sad songs on the radio, taking travel for granted.

    I think of the cold, buzzing windowpane
    of a jet over Nebraska on a sharp blue day;
    being the one who sees the plane's shadow
    move over yellow and green fields and being
    the one who is the shadow. Of a flag straining,
    taut as a sail in the wind, and the percussion
    of its grommets on the metal pole, of being both
    bell and bright symbol, reined in by a rope
    of breath and heartbeat, knowing nothing else.

    The doctors who are operating on two brothers
    just down the road from here will not separate them
    today, although they could. There is a long process
    involved, like understanding art, or forgiving yourself
    for something you never meant to do, but somehow had to
    anyway, something as inescapable as your own voice
    twinned with your best effort. With patience, most of us
    survive. Look how the afternoon proceeds
    quite well without you, one minute at a time, alone.
    Zero Degrees at First Light may be purchased at Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble and www.davidrobertbooks.com

    cherylsnell wrote this review Monday, December 17 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Moving Picture
    • 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 )
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