EILEEN TABIOS Engages
Heisenberg’s Salon by
Susan Lewis
(BlazeVOX Books,
Buffalo, N.Y., 2017)
The nature of the titles reflect one of the strengths of
Susan Lewis’ Heisenberg’s Salon: they
are conceptual, versus relating to objects, places, etc. (Not that the names of
objects and places can’t be(come) conceptual, but I digress…) So we have titles like “Reckoning,”
“Disillusionment,” “The Complexity,” “A Sense of Community,” and so on.
The conceptual aspects of the titles highlight a particular
deftness to these poems. The poems could be definitional for the titles, as
is often the case for any text following a title. But Lewis’ works aren’t
normative—this leads to poetry. So this leads to such examples as
, a journey from the dinner table to “the hunt for someone
to hold him accountable” whose oddness, unpredictability and multiple turns
within a single paragraph compel admiration.
Then there’s
which reminds—and, sadly, it’s an ever-timely reminder—that
if there are gods, gods are cruel. Surely those gods have been laughing
particularly hard over January 2017…
Nonetheless, as soon as I made that conclusion about the
titles (as such applied in the first 30 pages and I was writing a review as I
was reading the book), the exceptions arise. For example, there's the title poem
“Heisenberg’s Salon” which obviously relates to, um, a salon—perhaps (the
object and place of) a room. But such, too, is the nature of Poetry: it’s a
slippery beast. As soon as you think up a conclusion, Poetry contradicts. Yet,
this also is where Lewis’ strengths of originality and imagination arise. For
example, here is “Heisenberg Salon”
and, as befitting Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, it presents
(1) how context determines what is to happen and (2) where the metaphor for
context, an apartment, rearranges itself every time the poem’s “she” turned her
back. What’s intriguing—and both fun and funny—about this poem’s notions is how
the poem’s “she” might be the only person in a room and yet “she” in her
multiplicities thus can conduct a salon—per another definition of salon being a
gathering. I do this a lot, by the way, hence my empathy with its notion—that
is, I’m a mountain hermit and I talk to myself a lot (though I’m not as witty
as these poems) … but, okay, I digress again…
There are also several series of poems, that is poems with
the same title and just numbered to differentiated among themselves, e.g.
“After Months” has three versions, “The Young Man” has four versions, “Pathetic
Fallacy” has four versions, among others. It’s a welcome approach for showing
the diversity and resulting wit of Lewis’ mind. For example, compare the first
two entries for “It Was the Year” (which was prompted by Joanna Fuhrman’s
marvelous The Year of Yellow Butterflies blog
project).
When a poet has a wide expanse and is keenly attuned to the slyness of language, the combination
can generate a great read—such, is what Susan Lewis has accomplished.
*****
Eileen Tabios does not let her books be reviewed by Galatea Resurrects because she's its editor (the exception would be books that focus on other poets as well). She is pleased, though, to point you elsewhere to recent reviews of her work: THE OPPOSITE OF CLAUSTROPHOBIA was reviewed by Alan Baker for Leafe Press' LITTER and by Valerie Morton for The Poetry Shed; I FORGOT ARS POETICA was reviewed by Valerie Morton for Leafe Press' LITTER; and AMNESIA: Somebody's Memoir was reviewed by two Amazon Hall of Fame Reviewers: by Kevin Killian and by Grady Harp. She released three books and two chaps in 2016, and is scheduled to release a similar number in 2017. More info at http://eileenrtabios.com
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