Although Amber Tamblyn is best known as the star of the smash hit Joan of Arcadia, she is a serious poet, mentored by Jack Hirshman, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and other San Francisco Beat poets. She has self-published two chapbooks, and her poems have appeared in books published by City Lights. Here is her first collection of poems specifically for teens. The poems relate to teen issues such as love and relationships, and all are influenced by Amber's feminist sensibility. An introduction by Jack Hirshman puts her poetry in a literary context, and her personal introduction gives insight into her poems and helps readers access them. Amber's celebrity will help bring the value of poetry to a new, wider audience.
Amber Tamblyn is an author, actor, and director. She's been nominated for an Emmy, Golden Globe, and Independent Spirit Award for her work in television and film, including House M.D. and Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. Most recently, she wrote and directed the feature film Paint It Black. She is the author of three books of poetry, including the critically acclaimed bestseller Dark Sparkler, and a novel, Any Man, as well as a contributing writer for the New York Times. She lives in New York.
I bought Free Stallion because I am a fan of Amber’s acting abilities. Writing is so personal. I was interested in hearing her voice. I expected to be impressed and was by her strong vision and intellect.
The movie set is bustling, and Mr.Lynch tells my father to not bother with continuity.
Not bother? Continuity is the definition of a father!
I want to scream this into Mr.Lynch's face.
Scream, scream and scream. Like a child wild and blind with its first pain. Of birth, or of falling from a bicycle to the earth.
The span of a bandage across a scratched knee must reach over the bruise and the blood. Or else it's not a bandage but a strip of tape, loose with a hundred Donald Ducks, Plutos smiling over my pain.
But Mr.Lynch is surrounded by those low madchens of a thousand failed matinees. So I hold back the scream carefully, like a moth injured by drop of rain.
So I tell myself, "Breathe Amber, and remember: he is an actor. And the only continuity that matters is a home life far away when the shooting season ends away from the leer of Mr.McLachlan."
It is good to know that the future of poetry is in Amber Tamlyn’s hands. Free Stallion, was her first published collection of poems (or the first that I knew of). As soon as I read a few poems it became apparent that she is a poet not a pretender. She opens herself in her verse and lets her vulnerability show through, then turns political in the next poem and lets us know where she sees injustice or inequality. And equally, she champions the cause of poetry as founder and supporter of the Write Now Poetry Society. I like this book so well, that as soon as her next one, Bang Ditto, was announced I ordered it.
Back cover blurbs from Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Michael McClure. Foreword by Jack Hirschman. Introduction by Tamblyn. Topics include lovers, her mother, and sociopolitical issues. A poem each on Woody Guthrie and Thelonious Monk.
My favorite is "Sneaker".
Having just recently taken a woman's form, damn proud, yes, this ass is mine. - "Pipe Dreams"
I consider myself flexible in awkward positions. Not a home wrecker, but I do knock. - "Moths"
a bottle of jack and the night is a coward coming going kissing and telling - "Free Stallion"
I don't know anything about poetry, but the two things I like about poetry are the imagery and the precise word choice. In this book, Amber tends to tell rather than to show (resulting in no imagery), and she often relies on funky structure and word play (rather than precise word choice) to drive home her point. I also find many of the subjects she's written about cliche, and to be honest she comes across as pretentious rather than genuinely concerned about world problems.
Sometimes I'm just not sure how to rate things or even what to say here in this space. I feel like singing and dancing poetry but I don't have the skill with words and imagery that is required when talking about a true poet.
Is this the best I've read? No. But not the worst. Middling poetry, at times pretentious, at times heart stopping. So I fall in between and call it good enough, though I doubt I've really defined this at all.
Tamblyn's poetry is so-so. A lot of it seems more suited to being performed than being read. I'm not sure what I was expecting, but it wasn't what I got. Still, her poetry does have some interesting insights into her life.
I have a hard time really getting into poetry, but I knew of Amber Tamblyn from Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. So I thought it would be worth my time.
Some poems I didn't get, but I have a few favorites: -Pipe Dreams -A Valid Question Ensues Unstitched -Paper Tiger
I've been a fan of amber's for a very long time. And her poetry is just as a mazing as her acting. Her writing also influences some of my writing as well.
Cam someone ever really review someone's poetry? Poetry is personal, subjective,, a little madcap, occasionally marks tje passing of something or someone important.
Some of these interested me greatly, what was said, or just implied.
Amber Tamblyn keeps evolving, taking on the new, not being choked off by the past. And that is progress. And interesting.
Her best role may end up teaching. But that's God's business, not mine. I'm just glad for her vivid imagination and ways of cracking open the next door.
This short volume of poetry packs a lot of punch for being just under 100 pages and just 31 poems. Written spanning over 10 years of the author's life, they have a breadth and depth not often seen in authors so young. They are poems written as a mix of self-exploration and in attempts to grasp concepts and capture experiences. Found in these poems, there is often a rawness and vulnerability many authors will not show in their works.
The poems are: Kill Me So Much Disguise Ol' Green Eyes The Coliseum Banana Dig 1 & 2 Numbers Sink Her Paper Tiger What?s the Word Nocturne for Chopin Sneaker The State A Valid Question Ensues Unstitched Free Stallion Plume Pax Vobiscum Anna Beyond the Pale Dear S. Vibration Moths When Pipe Dreams Neu Tour 2003-Greendale Ends Dear Divinity Train Truth About Dark Celebrate The Loneliest
This collection is one I will add to my list of poetry to reread every few years. I have read it twice and found that on the second reading I discovered much more about the poems and myself than upon the first reading.
Of the 31 poems in this collection, I only connected with three. I know the fault is mine because I don't like reading poems about blood & sex & puking. I STILL LOVE AMBER TAMBLYN'S ACTING TALENT, just to be clear.