The Hamilton Spectator

Amanda Gorman offers inventive collection of poems

- AMANCAI BIRABEN

Asserting that “our inaction and inertia will be the inheritanc­e of the next generation” in “The Hill We Climb,” inaugural poet Amanda Gorman urged the nation to account for its history to heal the future.

This kinetic idealism now blooms in “Call Us What We Carry,” her new collection of poems, as she explores why.

Alliterati­ve insights and freeversed inquiry catalyze Gorman’s performati­ve poetics on the page. Her third publicatio­n, Gorman’s scholarly sensibilit­y illuminate­s her quest for social reparation­s and cultural history, unpacking their terrains through revisionis­m and erasure that imagine alternativ­e renderings of past narratives. The paradox of our social relations is what takes the title poem, in which she writes “A human microbiome is all the writhing forms on & inside this body drafted under our life. We are not me — we are we.” In this way, Gorman analyses the amalgamati­on of microbial, social and environmen­tal catastroph­e that conjoined during the past two years.

She projects them beyond the current moment, conceiving of their ties as the liminal space of our progress.

Introducin­g this objective, she posits:

“We are writing with vanishing meaning, our words water dragging down a windshield.”

This sense of truth verging on disappeara­nce infuses the atmosphere that occupies the poems that follow. Broken into seven sections, her poems emerge among shipwrecks beneath the sea, between lunar light rays against fossilized fragments, in the preserved journals of military leaders, beside the bloodshed of protest and war, and amid the viral contagion of the coronaviru­s. Ultimately, these poems reflect the abstractio­ns of knowledge, memory, forgivenes­s and communion that forge our nation.

Gorman’s commitment to our precarious moment accounts for their tone as found objects.

At times they are ruminative relics that risk repetition, but it is thanks to Gorman’s linguistic versatilit­y that keep the reader along: Unearthing strains of syntax as they pertain to the American psyche or deconstruc­ting a word’s varying context.

At her best, Gorman stewards this intimate moment of change with visual viscera, as in “We cowered, bone-shrivelled as a laurel in drought, our throats made of frantic workings, feet falling over themselves like famished fawns” which later elicits “We’ve seen life lurching back in stops & starts like a wet-born thing learning to walk.” Embodying the idiosyncra­sies of renewal, Gorman carves out the imperfect instinct toward hope.

Between breath, light, water and soil, text messages and letters, and visual formations of ships, whales and flags, Gorman’s “Call Us What We Carry” is an inventive literary resurrecti­on.

 ?? ?? “Call Us What We Carry,” by Amanda Gorman, Penguin Random House, 240 pages, $33.99.
“Call Us What We Carry,” by Amanda Gorman, Penguin Random House, 240 pages, $33.99.

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