Friday, July 21, 2023

Duck Lessons - Stories by Jim LeCuyer

 Duck Lessons: Stories by Jim LeCuyerDuck Lessons: Stories by Jim LeCuyer by James LeCuyer

My rating: 4 of 5 stars         Published 23 February, 2023 in The Berkeley Times, Knox Book Beat as “Tempered, Tickled & Truthful.”
James M. LeCuyer’s Duck Lessons is totally cool and just right. 

        He is a wacky, deeply philosophical in a totally plebeian way (if that’s possible) writer-storyteller; occasionally obscene, vacillating between frightened, outrageous, furious, sneaky, bizarre, practical, deep, risky and snort-laughingly funny while also being completely understandable to anyone with a slightly open mind.

         A disturbingly multifaceted writer. You really never know what he’s going to make happen next, but it’s always amazing, with a REAL story to tell. Profound points in plain-looking packages. Loved it. I wish Goodreads had 4 ½ stars! LeCuyer deserves every half-star!

ABE Books: https://www.abebooks.com/978194546716...


View all my reviews

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Rev. Leona Nicholas Welch is Taking Back Old!

Taking Back Old: Poetry Celebrating Old Women

Taking Back Old: Poetry Celebrating Old Women by Leona Nicholas Welch
My rating: 5 of 5 stars        25 May 2023 as “Poetic Expressions” in The Berkeley Times, “Knox Book Beat.”

        Taking Back Old: Poetry Celebrating Old Women appeared at just the right time. Everyone seems to be revving up for the summer Poetry Issue, pow-wows and festivals; and the pandemic Passover is releasing the floodwaters of words, songs and sagas we’d pent up in so many of our journals, letters, poems and zoom meetings.

         God and Goddess help us if we/you have to wander 40 years before reaching The Promised Land of Ecofeminism, Class, World, Species, Religious, Cultural and Racial Respect and Solidarity; the bones of Maya Angelou, Daniel Ellsberg, Rachel Carson and Nelson Mandela (and me, and…) on our/your shoulders like Abraham’s. 

         Rev. Leona Nicholas Welch has awesome Grandmothers, Friends, and is a Mother among mothers -- “Women whose beauty, wisdom, and grace / In old age, inspire me” from her time at Berkeley’s Graduate Theological Union American Baptist Seminary of the West and African American Methodist Episcopal (AME) churches and beyond.

      “Welch has served and ministered to the elderly for over fifty years,” she says, and she is “Grateful for the aches and the pains/ that let me know/ that I am alive. Notice my stride.” This woman is not wasting time just sittin’ around. She’s got too many awesome Role Models to be “totin’ A ton of bitter black bread/ for every year she’s had….” And tells us “Lay your paper bag down/ let your tale be told.”

         That is the key: trust your story, and use the best of your art and memories to say “I AM STILL HERE.”  

        “This poem is motion, as it is sound. Hear this beautiful old, black woman poem whose meter and beat could have been the anxiety beat of a heart birthing a black child on a cold, rainy night, in an Alabama Backwoods. This poem remembers the hand that started the breath, and it remembers the breath.”

         “my heart moves toward the love in your eyes./ On some mysterious plain between us/ a connection is realized.”

         “Yes, we are old, but our years only/ serve to multiply our determination… / UNITY IS ABOUT TO BE REBORN/ The old women of the world say so.”

Yes, we say so!

Taking Back Old: Poetry Celebrating Old Women, Leona Nicholas Welch, Berkeley, CA, 2022.

https://www.goodreads.com › author › show › 1319428.Leona_Nicholas_Welch

http://www.thesearethedaughters.com/a...

https://www.gtu.edu/

https://www.facebook.com/ktvallejolove/  

https://www.stpaulberkeley.org

View all my reviews

A Little Want -- Latter Days of Eve: Beverly Burch

 Leave Me a Little WantLeave Me a Little Want by Beverly Burch

My rating: 4 of 5 stars        25 May 2023 as “Poetic Expressions” in The Berkeley Times, “Knox Book Beat.” 

Beverly Burch’s A Little Want was mostly very good, but her Latter Days of Eve was definitely excellent, and won awards like the John Ciardi Prize for Poetry to prove it. 

        I have been wondering a lot about women and men, boys and girls; about love, desire, power and control. (like for 55 years or more?) She is a Berkeley psychotherapist (you have my sympathy), and I felt she unsheathed my tough, coarse, protective, snakelike skin as I read her wonderful poems. (“Difficult” mothers and religious upbringings are hard “crosses to bear.”)       

A few of my quotes and notes: “I went after words” -- “Riddle” (with no question marks?) What, Who, Whose? -- Autobiographical scent, sensory. – “Rumors of the Old Somewhere.” Yes! – “three lovers one week,/ I felt neither shame nor doubt” –

“Age comes like a scourge: red hot with renunciation.” -- (Wow!) -- “Schoolmarms embraced me/ like madonnas. Little favor here, kind words there.” -- 

        “I want to fill you up, little chink in the heart.” Mothering poems and the Stormy Sonnet and “An Incantation for a Hard Rain.”

So right, so RIGHT! Brava! Bravo!

Leave Me A Little Want, Beverly Burch, 2022, Terrapin Books, West Caldwell, NJ.
Latter Days of Eve, Beverly Burch, 2019 , BkMk Press, University of Missouri-Kansas City.


View all my reviews

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Robert Thomas Sonnets -- Two Torches, One Cliff

 Sonnets with Two Torches and One Cliff (Carnegie Mellon University Press Poetry Series)Sonnets with Two Torches and One Cliff by Robert Thomas

My rating: 5 of 5 stars Published 25 May 2023 as “Poetic Expressions” in The Berkeley Times, “Knox Book Beat.”

Thomas’ Sonnets are just amazing. William Butler Yeats said “a poem comes right with a click like a closing box,” and Thomas’ do just that; but in a sensual, organic way, not “mechanical” nor artificial in the least. His art of language, like the best, is totally hidden; leaving exactly the right sound and suggestion to strike the senses, mind and heart all at once.       

        Not rhyming nor strictly Iambic pentameter, they are all titled “SONNET WITH (ONE WORD/IMAGE) AND (ANOTHER WORD/IMAGE),” like “SONNET WITH SCHLOCK AND YONDER” and “SONNET WITH DEATH AND RED-CHECKED TABLECLOTH.” He said they were “theme and variation” on “jealous love of various kinds,” but I found them often the most precise, vivid, understandable and gracious explications of men’s jealousy of women (‘s sensuality/sexuality) I’d ever encountered. (And I’ve read A LOT on those subjects. Trust me. Freud was way off, but on generally the right track for his [highly restricted/patriarchal] era.)

         A few of my (very sparse) notes: “the poet and the form – interaction, creative. -- These are terrific poems! -- Great sound. -- Sharp. -- Completions. -- Just wonderful! -- Wow. -- Like Rilke, but modern. -- Miraculous. -- Understandably opaque. -- Duluth! -- Imagination… -- Better & better! -- Such a pleasure to love someone and write about it/them/yourself so perfectly! – 

        Who IS this guy? Robert Thomas. What a dumb name for such a magical wordsmith!... -- Love it. No idea what it ‘means’.” etc. -- “The storm of noise” -- The only cliché in the book. – “p. 83 -- Infinite truth.”

You don’t need a lot of notes if the poetry is just right. 

(CLICK)

Sonnets with Two Torches and One Cliff, Robert Thomas, 2023, Carnegie Mellon Press, https://citylights.com/general-poetry/sonnets-with-2-torches-1-cliff/

OR POETRY FLASH BOOKSHOP https://bookshop.org/p/books/sonnets-with-two-torches-and-one-cliff/18842999?ean=9780887486913   

 Poetry Foundation https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/robert-thomas-56d205e3abb9f

View all my reviews

Monday, July 17, 2023

"Don't Agonize, ORGANIZE!" The Girl by Meridel LeSueur

The GirlThe Girl by Meridel LeSueur
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

27 April, 2023, published as "Don't Agonize, Organize!" Knox Book Beat in The Berkeley Times.

         Born in 1900, Le Sueur was hunted and haunted by sexual predators and the Red Scare police and agents of the 30s and 1950s, but bolstered by a forthright courage, her bond with like-minded others and a powerful determination that kept her going through 1996. 

        The never-named “girl’s” first person narrative and compelling spoken word multilogue is radically unpretentious and boldly descriptive in the urgency of youth, the heaviness of the Great Depression and the fluidity of the present moment. Taken directly from intimately heard speech, rendered without quotation marks; half a dozen different stories from a Women’s Alliance writer’s group in 1939 are blended together and narrowed down to the rushing epic year through one young woman: her Minnesota family’s farm and city of St. Paul, her viscerally immediate world.        

Portions of The Girl were published in various places between 1935 – 1945, then gathered together and re-edited in 1978 to “a work of fiction” which Prof. Neala Schleuning said “does not tell us about the thirties—she invites us to join in that experience…opens the panorama…for us to see the rhythms of that culture, those people…different from the flowering prairies of the Midwestern farms and villages…a stark world…of urban poverty and the beginnings of our modern bureaucratic world.” (p. 201) (photo: residents of a tenement USA early 1930s)

        A woman in “Robber Baron” America who told vivid truths about her life and the politico-social world around her; about others as well as mass movements. “Big picture” linking intimate story. To expose those who employed violence, money, murder and the media who cruelly controlled and manipulated women, the elderly, immigrants, workers, minorities, people of color, the disabled and disadvantaged. Sound familiar? Sadly, YES.

“This is one of the stories they didn’t want you to read,” her website says, and it’s true. 

        LeSueur had been a writer all her life; but had two children, an extended family, wide community involvement and leaned more toward journalism, lyricism, collectivism, labor and feminist activism than intellectual self-analysis and justification. When I knew her in The Women Poets of the Twin Cities in the 1970s to the 90s, she despised the effete sophistication of T. S. Eliot and reveled in the ferocious eroticism and embodied spirituality of the Second Wave of Feminism boiling to the surface of the literary world. (photo: Audre Lorde, Meridel LeSueur and Adrienne Rich in 1980)

        Her great-granddaughter says she, “wheelchair-bound, was passionately cherished and celebrated for writing visionary, raw, sensual poetry and prose about poverty, and organizing, and corn, and hunger, and Indigenous sovereignty, and state violence, and wheat fields.” LeSueur led us forward in the ascendance of female leaders, adventurers, labor, political, artistic and cultural organizers and soothsayers who emerged by necessity, choice and bravery during that time and then again in The Second Wave of Feminism of the 1960s and 70s.

        She had an automatic sense of being a uniquely caring and gifted woman among ALL women, ALL humanity, and using her life experiences, self-confidence and gifts for all living beings of her times into the past and future, especially the voiceless. Artistic and cultural organizers and soothsayers emerged by necessity and bravery, stepping forward when circumstances, fellow-sufferers and inner “hungers” demanded action, not excuses. (Photo: Minneapolis Star Tribune November, 1985)       


Women, multicultural, conscious and feminist attendees, speakers, scientists and performers at the recent Bioneers conference here seemed to be a large majority; dynamic, multi-talented and of all ages. The upcoming Bay Area Book Festival looked that way, too.  

        Wake up, Listen to Each Other, Get Together, Go!


View all my reviews