Posts Tagged ‘Issue 7.2’

Hat Trick! Three CR contributors in Best American Poetry

Friday, January 13th, 2012

We are exceptionally thrilled to congratulate three of our contributors whose poems (all from Issue 7.2) were chosen by Mark Doty for the Best American Poetry 2012!

Julianna Baggott, “For Furious Nursing Baby”
James Kimbrell, “How to Tie a Knot”
Dean Rader, “Self-Portrait as Dido to Aeneas”

Greatest congratulations to them!

Below, we’ve posted some comments they’ve made about their prize-winning poems, to whet your appetite for the collection, which will be available in September. If you can’t wait that long, you can order a copy of Issue 7.2 or any other back issue here (other than Issue 2.2, which died a watery death in our storage room years ago).

Julianna Baggott: Look, I’m charged with this particular poem being selected. Its title is “For Furious Nursing Baby.” There’s always a lot of conversation among women poets about writing on the subject of motherhood. I came to these discussions late—I wrote my first collection fairly isolated from the larger poetry community. And so I was dismayed by the idea that women poets—in quiet discussions among themselves—noted that they really wouldn’t or shouldn’t or couldn’t write about motherhood—for fear of being seen as … what? Weak? Writing about those flimsy women’s issues … I was dismayed, too, because I’d already done it. My first collection is titled This Country of Mothers. I thought that the women poets fearing backlash or, worse, having their work ignored were wrong. But over time I saw it happen—in reviews and in comment boxes. I read a review that called a memoir about giving a child up for adoption at 16 “womb gazing” (the memoir is by Karen Sayler McElmurray—and fantastic); I saw comments that claimed a certain female poet was “milking” her motherhood for poems. Is this said of Pinsky’s poems about jazz? No. And so this feels good. A vindication. Maybe those days are finally, mercifully passing us by. I’d like to think so.

James Kimbrell: I began “How to Tie a Knot” several years ago during a brief stay on St. George Island, not far from my home here in Tallahassee. I could only afford to stay there during winter, when the island is largely empty but for some die-hard fisherman and a few misguided German tourists. I wanted to write a poem grounded in a very real situation that gave voice to a more or less spiritual dilemma without simplification and, especially, without resolution. A line or so from the last section of Robert Duncan’s gorgeous poem “In the South” makes a cameo, but mostly what we have here are the musings of someone who is busily acting out a desert-island scenario in which half the day is spent searching for a poem while the other half is spent loosing bait. Amen.

Dean Rader, on “Self-Portrait as Dido to Aeneas”:  My book Works & Days poses a lot of questions about identity. One of the ways it does this is through self portraits that are not traditional portraits of the individual self but rather the self figured through a series of dialogues between other people like Hesiod and Dorothea Lange, Frog and Toad, Michael Jackson and Robert Hayden, and as is the case with this poem, Dido and Aeneas (which is the most shamelessly earnest of the bunch). So, all that is going on thematically, as they say, while formally, I wanted to create something lush and maybe even sensuous. I hoped couplets would, of course, connote a couple and coupling, and I hoped the long lines might suggest the lengths we go to for love (or despair) as well as how long love (or despair) stretches. I also just really like Dido, and I wanted a version of the story where she makes him doubt every future decision, where she gets her say, where it’s her words (not his deeds) we remember.

FREE Issue Offer

Friday, July 15th, 2011

In the interest of making space in our storage closet, and for the boost that beneficence brings, we are offering one free back issue (your choice) to anyone who emails me (Nicola) at editors@cincinnatireview.com by the end of the business day on Monday (July 18).

If you are already a subscriber, you can offer your free issue to a friend. If you’re a contributor, you can nab an extra copy of the issue that features your piece. If you’re not (yet) either of these, here’s your opportunity to sample our prose and poetry wares for zip.

As an added enticement, here’s PhD candidate Ruth Williams’s thoughtful analysis of Jaswinder Bolina’s “Stump Speech,” which appeared in our Winter 2011 number.

Ruth Williams: Jaswinder Bolina’s “Stump Speech” reminds us of the point made by numerous postcolonial theorists: more than any geographical location, the nation is first and foremost an imagined space. Bolina creatively captures this fact in his poetic version of a political stump speech; however, rather than a triumphant declaration of national superiority, the speech suggests the terrified and terrifying national imaginary most reminiscent of post-9/11, posteconomic meltdown America.

The opening of the poem sets the tone of trouble as the speaker recognizes the difficulty of these days, when “the shadows of the nation cast wobbly.” Using a direct address to us, the listener/reader, the speaker says: “I understand how near you are to the tipping.” In a wonderfully crafted metaphor, Bolina represents our national anxiety as a perilous walk along a “high scaffolding” where you’re caught between “trying not to overthink it and . . . trying not to think of it either.” With dangers all around us—“Bacteria in the headwind, free radicals in the cola”—of course, we “feel small.” We long to remember a different nation, in which we “didn’t even think of germicide.” A place where it was easy to merely grow up, “large and employable,” and find that the nation, in kind, “employed you.” However, such times have passed us by, and “Lately, you think you are nearly no longer the nation”; instead, we’ve become like “a hallway all vanishing point, no conclusion.”

There’s something about the second person “you” in this poem that is mesmerizing, in part because we don’t often hear a stump speech make such prolonged use of the second person; more often, we hear “we,” a call to collective unity. The “you” address causes us to intimately enter into Bolina’s rich sensory descriptions, to assume the imagined nation he presents us with as our own.

Yet in the context of the end of the poem, we begin to realize the danger in identifying so closely with the “you.” If elected, the speaker promises to restore our wounded national psyche, returning us to the same happiness we might experience walking in a “tree-shaded backyard of old friends you haven’t see in many years.” In the pleasant “sun after rain” feel of this space, the nation will be “flawness and naked and crooning beside you its pledge of fidelity, its ripe promise of industry, missile silos vigilant under the prairie, its warheads waiting in the sea.”

Clearly these lines suggest that the pleasant image of our nation cannot be erected without the unpleasant truth of the military-industrial complex; however, the power of this poem lies for me in its insistence that I examine how I, one the “yous” of this nation, have been called to adopt its imagery. Furthermore, the end of this poem forces me to ask: for what purpose am I being encouraged to adopt the speaker’s vision of this nation? In other words, is my own sense of peace necessarily contingent on the vigilant missiles, the waiting warheads? Must it always be this way?

“Heron”: Why We Like It

Friday, March 4th, 2011

On a particularly frigid Wednesday of last month, volunteer Brandon Whiting appeared for his office hours in nothing but an elaborate feather jumpsuit. This was not unusual in itself—feather suits are actually required office wear—so we didn’t think much of it. And when he began touting the benefits of an “all-marsh” diet, we figured he was just at the forefront of the newest Hollywood trend. But when he tried to wedge himself between our filing cabinets, referring to them only as “the sedges,” we realized something was amiss. We haven’t seen much of Brandon since the warmer weather arrived, but yesterday, while searching for one of our back issues, we discovered an elaborate paper nest in the back of our supply closet. On the artfully arranged scraps, he had written the following sentiments:

Brandon Whiting: At first glance, “Heron” by Meredith Davies Hadaway gives the impression of an actual heron: it’s tall, thin, and elegant. It’s reminiscent of a concrete poem in the sense that its form echoes its function, but Hadaway’s superb way of breaking lines elevates the simplicity of her subject.

In effect, “Heron” shows us the variety of ways a heron moves, “some-/ times looping/ down in/ question, sometimes leaning.” At other times it is content to “[lean]/ into fog—/  slash.” The short, choppy line breaks and terse efficiency (here and there a single word occupies its own line) remind me of a heron beating its wings.

One of the trickiest things about writing free verse is deciding where to break the lines, but this poem shows just how resonant a set of effective line breaks can be. “Heron” is a good example of how visual as well as verbal expression can enhance an object, and for that reason I like it.

Holiday Deal!

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

Do you have a friend, relative, or spouse who enjoys hot, portable beverages, carrying things in satchels, and reading engaging, eclectic poetry and fiction? Do they enjoy doing these simultaneously? OMG we have a deal for you! For just $25 you can get a one-year subscription to Cincinnati Review, a CR sling pack, and a CR thermos. Write us at editors@cincinnatireview.com and we’ll set something up.