rioing with roberto carcache flores

[image error]In my microreview & interview of Roberto Carcache Flores’ A Condensation of Maps, I noted how Flores has a knack for working up images that connect on both a conceptual and emotional level. In this week’s poem, “Friends in Rio Sapo,” we see the gradual build up of details and images culminate in a moment of quiet revelation.


The title sets up a moment of connection along “Toad River,” a phrase which is engaged immediately through the image of “passing clouds” looking “like white lily pads / in a heated / swimming pool.” This latter detail is jolting, as it implies a human element amidst an otherwise nature-focused poem. This jarring moment, however, serves to push the reader closer into the other details. As we move from cliff, albatross, mango groves, and stray dogs, just who the “friends” of the title are become apparent.


This coming together of elements continues in the second stanza as the speaker’s communion with Rio Sapo mirrors the arrival of “stray dogs.” At its heart, this poem reveals such communion as one of its gifts. I say gifts because of the third stanza’s subtle tumbling of details. Line by line, the third stanza evokes in words a similar spell as cast by what it describes. Between the sounds (undress, night’s, silence, innocence on one end; croaks, bank on the other) and the imagery presented, this last stanza reveals not the speaker’s thought but their experience before the reader.


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Friends in Rio Sapo – Roberto Carcache Flores


The passing clouds

are reflected on

the water’s surface,

like white lily pads

in a heated

swimming pool,

my feet feel

the rocky cliff’s

sharpness,

an albatross

glides through

surrounding

mango groves.


The opening

of a tuna can

and a bag of raisins

gathers some

stray dogs

around me,

their noses

grown tired

of corn meal

and the occasional

drum stick.


The frogs

begin to undress

the night’s

silence

with the

innocence

of their

early croaks,

all along

the moonlit

river bank.


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[image error]I’m also happy to share that I have received my copies of my new book Small Fires (FutureCycle Press)!


If you’re interested in purchasing a signed copy, feel free to email me at: thefridayinfluence@gmail.com


Copies can also be purchased from Amazon and FutureCycle Press!


This collection includes my poem “El Rio” originally published in Crab Creek Review.


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Happy rioing!


José


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Published on May 19, 2017 06:17
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