Originally Posted by
Dunc
Brian
If My Brains are Still Safe - wonderfully silly images. But is anyone's brain safe these days?
Dreams and Hopes - as you portray, it can get right down to basics at sunset.
Fear the Bomb - Well yes, there'll be Not Much we can do if someone fingers the wrong button. Pressing *like* is a perfect take on our relationship to the problem.
Impossible Dream - I drink to your wisdom. But give me time and I'll think of something to say to the stars.
A Plan - a fun little romp! Of course, there's always uniforms.
To Lay the Pencil Down - or even just Thank Gawd! It's a quite particular pleasure to reach the end of a NaPo.
As for vectors and scalars ...
Thanks for the thread.
Regards / Dunc
Thanks for the reads. Your observations are always welcome.
Originally Posted by
larryrap
Hi Brian,
I haven't been as diligent as you and some others with conveying my thoughts and support and I hope for your forgiveness on this. I do want to say a few words on some qualities I cherish in your work, the longer confessional poems in particular, a form which you own (you own several more kinds of poems but I have to focus). Yes, they're chatty, the opposite of tight (although the sentences are crafted with care to sound fluid and natural), and perhaps not the kind of high-charged language fix I'm often looking for. Your material is often of the most personal possible, something that could be objectionable in lesser hands. But here's where your good qualities come to the fore: generosity, frankness, a genuine curiosity towards people, and a wise and painful acceptance of the tragic - as well as the comic - in our lives. So typically a poem like "Selfie with Dad" will raise an initial resistance in me, then slow me down and take me in with its patience and human warmth and allow me to emerge feeling more wise and alive than before.
It's a point of interest that when you bring these qualities to the Japanese art series, something entirely wonderful happens, as you bring a culture distant in space and time to the same kind of vivid human life as with your own personal accounts, and the sense of connection to some great human or transhuman fate spanning centuries becomes very uplifting and strong.
I watched the trailer to the Ghibli film which I'd missed somehow until now - I'll have to track that film down. I feel very close to the sentiments you put into that poem.
I'm glad I had the minutes to share my thoughts on your work although I ought to get more into specifics, but now to peel onions etc. for an evening with our guests Mike and Sue.
Best wishes,
Larry
Thanks for the very kind words, Larry. I understand what you mean by "the opposite of tight", and for certain types of narratives that fluidity and expansiveness seem to me essential.
In my researches, I found that I had written another "Selfie with Dad" some months ago--totally forgotten--which lacked the fire of this newer one, and so it had fallen to the wayside. Perhaps, the thing I needed was the urgency that NaPo brings to poetic writing.
As for the Japanese poem, I have one print left. I actually wrote something for this last remaining print some months ago, but like the first "Selfie with Dad" that was stillborn, this poem did not quite fit--a little too contrived. I am hopeful now, though, that the end is truly in sight, and I will surely let you know when it is finished.
Originally Posted by
Arlene
just wsnt to say it's been fun, snd sometimes sad, reading your thread, and to thank you again for dropping by mine. this last one...good fun again.
Thanks, Arlene. Fun and sad--a range of emotions can be the best thing to hope to achieve in an exercise like NaPo.
Originally Posted by
Donner
Hi, Brian,
She doesn't ask for pity, I must say—
just do not be the one to block her way.
Amen.
Having grown up during the 50's and 60's and going through the era of grade school bomb drills (put your coat over your head to protect from falling glass and sit down in front of your locker) and backyard bomb shelters, so We Do Not Fear the Bomb resonated with me. Even back then I wondered how a coat over my head could possibly protect me from an atomic blast, but we did it anyway - there's little we can do—.
Keep smilin', Brian. You do good work.
Donner
Thanks, Donner. Your observations and your experience are spot on, as usual. Many thanks for the words and the reads.
BrianIs AtYou
I think I think, therefore I might be.