Showing posts with label New Directions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Directions. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2024

rob mclennan : The Principle of Rapid Peering, by Sylvia Legris

The Principle of Rapid Peering, Sylvia Legris
New Directions, 2024

 

 

 

 

Smart readers know that a new poetry title by Saskatchewan poet Sylvia Legris is worth noting, thus her latest, The Principle of Rapid Peering (New York NY: New Directions, 2024), following prior collections Circuitry of Veins (Winnipeg MB: Turnstone Press, 1996), Iridium Seeds (Turnstone Press, 1998), the Griffin Poetry Prize-winning Nerve Squall (Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 2005), Pneumatic Antiphonal (New Directions, 2013), The Hideous Hidden (New Directions, 2016) and Garden Physic (New Directions, 2021). There are few poets working this kind of tone and scale, writing a particular intimate depth across both the expanse and distance, although one might see Ottawa poet Sandra Ridley, a poet originally from Saskatchewan, holding echoes (tendrils?) of Legris’ lyrics throughout her own.

As the online blurb for the collection offers: “The title of Sylvia Legris’ melopoeic collection The Principle of Rapid Peering comes from a phrase the nineteenth-century ornithologist and field biologist Joseph Grinnell used to describe the feeding behavior of certain birds. Rather than waiting passively for food to approach them, these birds live in a continuous mode of ‘rapid peering.’ Legris explores this rich theme of active observation through a spray of poems that together form a kind of almanac or naturalist’s notebook in verse.” Presented, as well, as her Covid-era collection, Legris examines specifics that pinpoint deep enough to bleed into an abstract, writing an anxiety that works to ground itself, quite literally, into a comfort of foliage and gardens; what emerges out of both the wild and cultivated earth. “Ring a ring o’ roses.” she writes, as the second section of the twelve-part sequence “Viscum Album,” “Broom root and mistletoe. / Ligneous chatterers. / Lungs halo March.” Given such, the poems across The Principle of Rapid Peering situate themselves across a Covid-specific timeline, neither forefront nor backdrop but as a constant presence, with pieces such as “Forecast Issued 5:00 am CST / Sunday 27 December 2020” and “Forecast Issued 6:00 am CST / Friday I January 2021.” The collection also hosts two Covid-quartets, equally titled “An Anatomy in Four Seasons,” the first of which holds titles “The First Spring of Covid,” “The First Summer,” “The First Fall” and “The First Winter” (one presumes you can discern the titles from the second sequence easily enough, hopefully). The garden, within its seasonal timelessness remains, but within the shadow of this particular period, as “The First Summer” offers:

Spring’s undying debate suspended in interpleural space.

The sky doubles down with a butchery of rain,
seedlings slaughtered amid monotonous water.

Every sodden second another watershed moment
exits the lung-stream, antediluvian elms desperate for breath.

Solstice, the air stands still, the branches grasp.
Summer under a canopy of arterial despair.

Legris is ever for the smart and unexpected lyric twist, offering perceptions thick with consideration, even as simple as the opening line of the final poem ““Recollections of the Future”,” that reads: “Weather was measured in calories.” The collection is organized in two parts: the first, into poem-sections “The Air is Seeded,” “Ground Truth” and “Occasionally the Field of Possibilities”; and the second second is made up of three poems, opening with a longer sequence, “The Walk, or The Principle of Rapid Peering,” a poem subtitled “(Also known as A Trek of Air, A Living Poem).” Furthering the accomplishments of her prior collections, Legris’ poems offer precisions, although less of the carved diamond than a lyric of fleshy richness and layers, composing a cosmology of ground effect; these are hard-working hands rich with soil, as “The Second Summer” from the second sequence “An Anatomy in Four Seasons” begins: “The post-winter grousing of melt and pout / (a spring of noncommittal petulance) / overpowered by bitterroot’s parched optimism.”

Legris has evolved into composing poetry collections as field studies, and her attention to the natural world, centred on and around her garden, expands across this collection into a framing of those first two-plus uncertain years of the Covid-era. As the poem “Forecast Issued 6:00 am CST / Friday I January 2021” begins: “7:00 AM the sky a hypothetical blue / blue outside the geographic range of blue, / accidental, a blue-grey gnatcatcher.” There are moments the Covid-era shows itself only through the particulars of those dates, those seasons, and that underlying uncertainty, held into certainty through what otherwise remained unaffected: the colour of the sky, for example, or the attentions of birds. If her prior collections focused on the what and why of plants and planting, this collection offers itself as a way into the routine of attending that same garden as, again, a grounding, offering a way to find footing across an uncertain era; through her attending to birds, moths, plants and seasons, Legris charts those uncertainties, all amid her ongoing and continued search for possibilities. As the eighth and final “Occasionally the Field of Possibilities” poem closes:

Occasionally the field of possibilities
is the erstwhile bronchial understory
in an iteration of brash Icteridae,
grasslocked & syllabilizing,
a twelve-bird octave, a slew
of ground-foraging blackbirds.

 

 

 

 

 

rob mclennan’s [selfie, with Aoife, taken in Perth, Ontario] collection of short stories, On Beauty (University of Alberta Press) will appear in fall 2024. His next poetry collection is the book of sentences with University of Calgary Press, the second in a trilogy of collections that began with the book of smaller (University of Calgary Press, 2022).

 

 

 

Thursday, May 20, 2021

2020 Governor General's Literary Awards Poetry shortlist interviews: Anne Carson

norma jean baker of troy, Anne Carson
New Directions, 2020
The Canada Council for the Arts’ 2020 Governor General's Literary Awards poetry shortlist
 

The 2020 Governor General's Literary Awards winners will be announced on Tuesday, June 1, 2021.

Anne Carson [photo credit: Peter Smith] was born in Canada and lives partly in Iceland now. 

I’m fascinated with the ways in which you approach books, especially given how many you’ve published so far. Does each new project begin as a potential extension of a far wider, ongoing canvas, or do you see each work as uniquely separate? Or a bit of both?

each one a new push into unknown places on tracks not yet possible.

Your work has long been engaged with blendings of ideas and forms, with this new work, a play shortlisted for a poetry prize, exploring both Marilyn Monroe and Helen of Troy “from their point of view.” What is it that such blendings provide that might not be possible otherwise?

i think of it more as juxtaposition than blending.  i find it more fruitful to think about 2 things in interaction with each other, rather than to think about either of them alone.  a triangular conversation is often easier than one on one.

The mythological Helen of Troy continues to fascinate contemporary poets, from H.D.’s infamous take to Georgia poet Gale Marie Thompson, who published her Helen Or My Hunger last year with YesYes Books. Has the mythological Helen become a figure that changes with each era because we require new ways of thinking about her?

yes certainly.  but Greek myths were always a vehicle for rethinking whatever problems are present to society’s mind at the moment – infinitely malleable substances, like play-doh with an air of ancient truth.

Given your exploration of form, what is it about the poem that holds your attention? Everything else you seem to do in your writing, from librettos to plays to essays, circles the foundation of poetry. What is it about poetry that anchors your attention from falling more fully into other forms?

falling is key.  there is no real falling in a prose medium, prose is a mechanism of intention and control.  only in poetry can you simply step off the building and fall. 

Have you been writing much in the way of poetry since norma jean baker of troy was completed? What have you been working on since?

a comic book version of Euripides’ Trojan Women with artist Rosanna Bruno is to be published this month (may 2021) by New Directions. 

a 12-minute opera libretto for composer Caroline Shaw and the Philadelphia Opera, available online.  title We Need To Talk.

a full-length opera libretto for composer Bryce Desmond and the Chicago Lyric Opera, to be mounted in 2024.  title Herakles.

an illustrated version of Euripides' Herakles (illustration by me).


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