“The leaves recede// and the flickering holes between them/ come forward// not angels, but unnamed objects” observes Pulitzer Prize winner Armantrout (
Conjure) in her masterly new volume, and it’s those flickerings she captures in lines pared down to essentials we don’t usually take the time to see. Here, Armantrout takes a deep dive into our constant negotiation with the world. “I have a great respect/ for the recalcitrance/ of objects,” she declares while placing experience on the same level; objects are out there and obdurate, more than can be grasped (“if the tree blooms pink/ there will be more// than we can imagine”), while “identity is made of select experiences,” sifted and shifted and used to define who we are. We see similarities (“each pitching frond// the arched neck/ of a horse”), crave contrast (“Clean lines separating/ bounty from its opposite”), connect ideas (“A stream system/ seen from above: tuning fork twig/ in winter forests”), and straddle the “now” and the “not yet”—all the while looking for our place in the world. In the end, what look like aphoristic, cut-crystal fragments of verse are actually reverberant with connection: “By pulsing, bars of music// make as if to reconsider,” and pulsing is a good way to describe these poems.
VERDICT Armantrout at her most thoughtful; highly recommended.
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