This is the 7th poetry book I have read for #TheSealeyChallenge. And I LOVED IT!
Recurring topics/themes/images: Mothman, Appalachia, fire, the Oxygen epidemic, language, and crime. There is also a great deal of love in this book. The poems are all free verse or prose poems, with variations of each form.
A few of my favorites bits:
"a lost dog breaking into a run when it
hears its name for the first time in years."
--Psalm for the Haters in the Book
"bruises on your chest heal faster than the
ones on your pride."
--Prayer for the Shitstains
"Wet feathers look so much like
your hair coming fresh off a swim."
--Augury
"I ached to become a ghost and when I did
I even ghosted the long pauses."
--(The Mothman Drops Out)
Mothman is the speaker in many of the poems. The other major thread is that of a friend of the speaker, whose trauma involves Oxy and fire. Turkey vultures and wild turkeys make appearances, as do Yeats, Chekov, Larry Levis, Dante, Senator Robert Byrd, Muriel Rukeyser, and figures from mythology and history.
This book, like many of the others I have read for this, includes sections and notes; I appreciate both. In full-length collections, the sections are a nice pause, as well as a nudge that we are changing, even slightly, direction, time, attitude . . . something. And the notes in all of these books have been fascinating. In this one, the poet, Robert Wood Lynn, states that any proceeds from the sale of this book will go to organizations that fight opiate addiction in Virginia and West Virginia. (A great reason to buy this book, besides the great poetry!) Also, you will learn about Invisible Fire!
Some of my favorite poems:
of the Ten Elegies for Fire and Oxycodone poems--The First, Second, and Seventh
of (The Mothman) poems--Pronounces Appalachia, Startles the Neighbors, and Reads From The
Book of the Dead
Voicemail from My Mother
The Best Shot in the House
About the Phones
I've lived in Appalachia and spent time in Mothman country, so I admit to being predisposed to liking this book. But it did win the Yale Younger Poets award, so I think I am objective enough to recommend it!