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Review Summary: Dreamy Whirl Through Life Nuances
Review: Blessing the Boats, New and Selected Poems 1988-2000, Lucille Clifton, BOA, Ltd., Rochester, NY 2000), 132 pp, offers a often dreamy whirl through nuances of life to include lustful desires of the sex, battles with breast cancer, death of a loved one, menopause, oppression and more. Her poems are feminine in perspective, but probably universally applauded. She doesn't insults. They read like surreal episodes from a dream, having fleeting scenes change in time and place in nanosecond flashes. Words. Words are bended and hammered into concepts seen alien, yet fitting. For example, how does one "hear the bright train eye...?" What the hell is the bright train eye? But in the context of " birthday 1999," not only does it fit, it's clear and above all, enlightening. The same cannot be said for all of Clifton poems. So of them includes miscues that makes them not so clear.
Boats is partitioned into four parts, New Poems (2000), From Guilty (1991), From the Book of Light (1993) and From the Terrible Stories (1996).
new poems:
In "moonchild," the author, deals with child sex abuse by a father, but rather than make the reader feel the pain, and anguish towards men, instead she attempts to share she has learned to cope with the memory to minimize, rather than maximize continued pain and suffering.
"the photograph: a lynching," in her poem on "a picture is worth a thousand words," she proves the same can be said for her poem. She describes the stark history of a lynching, and focuses on the stunned witness of the eyes of the children. She questions the whether other kids, black and white, upon seeing the photograph will be taught accurately what happened there or will the story be misinterpreted or discarded altogether.
"jasper texas 1998 for j. byrd" is as plain as it is powerful. The narrator asks, who's inhuman, the dragged or the draggers, clearly knowing the answer -- for the victim was dragged to death, involuntarily. But, so was Rodney King's beating, although some believed that he was in control throughout the ordeal. She concludes that deposits that if singing, "We Shall Overcome" is all we going to do about oppression, then we can expect more of the same.
In "alabama 9/15/63," the narrator feels so much for the 4 little black girls will go to heaven, but even that vision is obscured by the memory of a church bombing them to smithereens.
"Praise song," illustrates the warmth of unconditional love, the idea of welcoming a family member back home against their frailties, even when they appear to have lost their mind.
from quilting:
In "birth of language," we see the proverbial Adam shuddering to whisper, "Eve," which is excellent, loaded imagery, given what would be come the most dynamic relationship known to man. His shuddering was fitting.
"sleeping beauty" is funny and typical of the male-female dynamic - she comes out of a sleep and the first thing she notices is man, "and she blamed him."
book of light:
"women you are accustomed to," Clifton extols egalitarian gender values: she wants to be the women her man has been accustomed to, because misses his "dancing tongue."
"song at midnight," the poet depicts the loneliness of an unattractive woman, as she extols, love this woman who needs love because if the Black man doesn't, who else will?
"the earth is a living thing," personifies earth as a "black and living thing...in its kinky hair."
There are a series of poems that use the metaphor of "superman" and "clark kent," to reveal issues of romance where the expectation is that men have superman powers even though there's no reference to narrator personified as the fabled "Lois."
from the terrible stories:
"fox" poems are many in which the narrator personifies a fox, fearful of the terrible stories it must tell. These poems are the sex chronicles of a woman lacking and yearning for sex, not necessarily romance.
Like "leaving fox," in desperation, the narrator drops her guards totally, leaving herself open to all kinds of pain to get the sex she craves. "keep the door unlocked until something human comes in." She knows she's exposes her vulnerabilities to the worse that may come in, but she has accepted it apart of her fulfillment.
In "one year later," the narrator ponders what if she yields to her vixen desires, but pre-empts the thought with fear of what will follow -- how ill it change or impact her life, her home, her poetry?
"a dream of foxes," the narrator supposes what if women could pursue their vixen dreams without the fear of consequences.
In `amazons," the narrator returns to other issues, such as breast cancer, mastectomy, and more. She had inherited the breast cancer gene from generations of women before her. But, fortunately, there was only a scare, due to early detection.
`slaveships" she asks why did God not protect all from the inhuman hypocrites who enslaved her people in the name of God. She questions whether the sins can go on.
In "memory," narrator recalls a childhood stripped of oppression's shadow, so she will feel like she's done a good job of protecting her child's childhood.
A few poems from Boats escaped my level of sophistication. For example, "white lady," the narrator cries to cocaine to give her a ransom so she may have her kids back. - cocaine will only tell her to make her kids depend more. I thought those well taken pleas could be better be directed at the government, white supremacy, or the dealers, but not cocaine.
And, in "poem in praise of menstruation," Clifton uses metaphors that are astounding in that they sound so right even though unless you're in a dream state, they really don't make sense. For example, uses a simile of "blood red edge of the moon" - the moon isn't red at all. A better simile might have been the sun. Or, it could be something I'm not getting because I am a man. Perhaps that is her point, during that period, excuse the pun, the sun, the moon, they're all the same.
Using a prose style, Clifton's words are defined not by Webster but by the context in which she uses them. Her words often take flight from when we've known them to some far off place where she's taking us.
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Review Summary: Inciteful Read
Review: Review
Paul L. McGehee
Clichés are literary sins, so Lord forgive me when I say Lucile Clifton's Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems 1988-2000, is a blessing to own and an inciteful read. Clifton's lines and questions resonate well within the mind of a human being struggling with the issues of living. Like her story of Cancer in the poem "Dialysis", which leaves me with, "...in my dream a house is burning...in my dream I call it light". On another level, as a Black man I can appreciate her questioning the relationships between men women; love, interracial dating, rape, and lynching. Yet it is as a man comes the only critic, well not so much of a critic as it is the perspective coming from another vessel (so to speak). Clifton's poems run deep with imagery and situations articulating the complexities of being a woman, a black woman, in this society. It gives me incite, after all, mothers and sisters have left an impression of black womanhood on my heart, yet me not being a black woman (no shame hear, no offense), I don't get the poems, wholly and truly. That is it; but it is not enough to say this would not be a great addition to anyone's literary alter.
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Review Summary: Solid.
Review: Lucille Clifton, Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems 1988-2000 (BOA Editions, 2000)
There's a lot of good stuff in this volume. Especially fine are the mythological poems from Quilting (1991), some of Clifton's best work, delicate yet earthy language full of wonderful images and gentle surprises:
"when she woke up
she was terrible.
under his mouth her mouth
turned red and warm
then almost crimson as the coals
smothered and forgotten
in the grate.
she had been gone so long.
there was much to unlearn.
she opened her eyes.
he was the first thing she saw
and she blamed him.
("Sleeping Beauty")
That's serious poetry right there. It tells you all you need to know, and not a whit more. Granted, not every piece in the volume stands up to these, but then, there aren't that many volumes of poetry every written where everything is of the same quality (and in most of those, every word is utterly, ineffably horrible). When Lucille Clifton is on her game, as you can see above, she's one of the better poets going today; if you're not acquainted with her stuff, you should be. *** ½
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Review Summary: No music, no poetry
Review: Clifton exemplifies all that is wrong with modern poetry. This is preachy, PC prose, with some odd linefeeds thrown in, written in the currently popular style, addressing the currently popular issues.
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Review Summary: Poetry does not exist to make you comfortable
Review: I feel compelled to respond to the person who found the opening poem "racist" because the speaker says "another child has killed a child / and i catch myself relieved that they are / white."
First of all, the fact that a poem depicts a certain attitude or feeling does not mean that the poet endorses that attitude or feeling. In this case, the sentiment is honest even if it is not morally admirable. Poetry does not always depict life or human nature as we would like them to be, but rather as they are.
Second, the last line of the poem says "these too are your children this too is your child." So the poem has corrected the speaker's own withdrawal from the scene. It ends, I think, with a rejection of racism...but it could be a good poem even if it did not.