The Telegram (St. John's)

Grant Lovey’s second collection of poems covers a lot of ground

- Joan Sullivan is editor of Newfoundla­nd Quarterly magazine. She reviews both fiction and non-fiction for The Telegram. JOAN SULLIVAN  telegram@thetelegra­m.com  @Stjohnstel­egram

This is Grant Lovey’s second collection, a followup to “Our Gleaming Bones Unrobed.” It contains about 48 poems, each running a page or two.

Remember the five poetic elements from high school English class? These are imagery, rhythm/rhyme, sound, density, and line. Either Loveys paid lots of attention to his teachers, or has solid poetic instincts, or possible some combinatio­n of both, for he’s built these into the structure of his work here.

Under “Entropy,” “Fire soon strolled down our produce aisle, / prodding our bruises, squeezing us out / of our houses. We were unbelievab­ly ripe. / It knew exactly where to hurt us.”

Loveys’ poetry takes flight in unexpected visual tacks. And yet there’s a neat nuts-and-bolts to it amidst the unexpected symbolism. The verbs are very physical, even punchy:

“prodding,” squeezing.”

This continues in “Mongrel in a Car Park” where “The dark years come drooling,” “a league of suited / men and women breathe champagne”; “There is beauty even in mugshots” “And redemption / in the fur of my fur, / the weight at my waist.”

One poem is set in the porch of a shopping mall. Another un-spirals through winter. A third is paced by digging a hole.

In “Magpies,” “The biggest of them bobbing on wire legs / black wings half-spread, then held close / to a body slick and shining as if it had been greased” clocks and catches its prey: “Released, the ant tumbles into a void / as black as bloodied hearts, / blacker.” The beat is embedded in the vowels and consonants.

There’s the concentrat­ion of “Midden,” musing on the possibly of being swept away by a flood, “Perhaps the land will swallow us / and years from now an archaeolog­ist / will excavate our lives. / His fingers in the burn wounds / on the edge of my desk. Gifts from cigarettes / left idling when a poem won’t wait … In his ledger he will document our shared mythology – / man (one), woman (one), family home. / Unlayered, we could almost believe it.”

Or the form and repetition of “In This Song Sings the Light”: “Sometimes the world / seems curled up on itself like a horn / that big mouth wide as the sea / but blackdark inside and narrow / full of switchback­s and dead ends / and always that point of light like an encapsulat­ed sun / and you think how’d a girl end up in this place / this particular place so tangled up and dark / dark even in all this hard light / and you’re waiting for the sound to come / and blow all the dust from you / blow all the fear from your bones / and one gets to thinking / maybe that sound never does come / not from this horn anyhow”.

And the dynamics of “Freeze and Pixellate”: “Here we are, stuck in time / blowing and rubbing our sleeves / against the covers of history books / rendered opaque by the author’s remove / from anything but other books, / like catalogues chaining the earth’s turning / to title and number and calendar flip, / as if it wasn’t swinging around the sun / then, and in this and every other instant, slicking / off our cities to Pollock the universe’s walls / there next to our greatest victories and the wars / that ruined whole generation­s.” Such language in motion, from blowing and rubbing to rendered, chaining, swinging – and Pollock.

Most works seem fairly local, at times even domestic, but they also range through New York Central America. There are a lot of animals, moose and goats and especially dogs, but also angels, or at least the possibilit­y of angels (“between the two points where / wings would have burst from her back / had she been an angel”). There are varied temperatur­es, like the “Boiled turnips steaming / in mother’s mother’s crock” in “Us Crowd.” And awareness of the weather, as in “L’esprit de L’escalier” where “All night the wind sang / in one perfect note / pulled from its chest. / The power went after / the wind changed keys …”

Characters include “The Apothecary,” a “Hanged Man,” a “Crime Scene Photograph­er,” and “Tom Joad Redux.” And Janis Joplin.

In “Another Piece of Your Heart” “Purring a buzzsaw rumble / down deep in the chest, the voice of earth lost / in the songs of the shack-cabin built upon it / with bent nail sharps and trowelled flats. / Easy country, this, to stalk, to talk to. / But you were just a child. / Alone, your eyes watering / in the stillness / of endless claptrap motel rooms.”

“Miscreatio­ns” covers lots of narrative, textual, lyrical ground.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? “Miscreatio­ns: poems,” by Grant Loveys; ECW Press; 88 pages; $19.95.
CONTRIBUTE­D “Miscreatio­ns: poems,” by Grant Loveys; ECW Press; 88 pages; $19.95.
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