With so many poets writing about the academy, it's refreshing to see someone addressing office work—though Chang (
Salvinia Molesta) is less concerned with our endeavors than with our fraught relationship with power. Throughout, her lines are unpunctuated, her words compacted and repeated, the music a mad, tumbling rush—signaling exactly the not-so-quiet desperation of office life: "we are high performers former high hopers on a high wire." The boss dominates and belittles—"pretends to glue us after/ she breaks us we try to glue ourselves"—and the pressure to please her is relentless. Meanwhile, she herself is safely protected "in a no-fly zone even when [she]/ misses numbers poor-performs." Chang further highlights the anomie of the office with set pieces referencing Edward Hopper and includes poems about her father's "stroke/ a stroke of bad luck," detailing his loss of language (so in contrast to her own facility) while paralleling the control in home and office: "my father// dictated to me to eat tomatoes my father was dictated to/ by his boss."
VERDICT Its theme might sound disheartening, but this volume is in fact poignant, energized, apt, even witty; a wide range of readers will enjoy.
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