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A YEAR UNDER A RESTRAINING ORDER

Sparks of clear lines, dampened by too much repetition.

A collection of poems about writing, ordering marijuana, and reevaluating one’s expectations.

The speaker in Akley’s (The Psalmist, 2017, etc.) works meditate on complications of daily life. The narrator’s complicated relationship with his ex-wife and their shared children reappears often, and Akley tends to favor description over projection, which gives the scenes a kind of emotional opacity. Plans to quit working for the U.S. Veterans Affairs office and travel are also a recurring motif, and after the fact, the author turns to reflect on that decision (a screen shot of a resignation email provides proof). A lot of Akley’s poems are about recursive worries about creative work, specifically regarding his ideas and writing practice. The poem’s speakers try to walk the line between drinking, smoking, and composing poetry with an authentic voice. It’s a style that fits neatly next to the late poet Charles Bukowski’s—grimy and to the point. (One poem even attempts to one-up Bukowski himself; apparently, even he’s too much of an aesthete.) The speakers’ swearing at Frédéric Chopin and admiration of David Foster Wallace are almost intriguing, and few books discuss both quantum mechanics and preparing beef jerky for one’s daughter’s breakfast. The pacing and motifs of most of the poems, however, are similar enough that they have a tendency to bleed together, although they are pulled back into relief by certain sharp phrases, such as “Sometimes I wish / my eyes were on a different face.” Later on, the poems are broken up by short narrative paragraphs and, in one case, by a full essay about the protagonist of Albert Camus’ absurdist 1956 novel The Fall. These sections give the impression that the book is organized more by chronology than by theme or style, although this choice is neither clear nor explained, which makes the overall goal of the book difficult to piece together. 

Sparks of clear lines, dampened by too much repetition.

Pub Date: Aug. 21, 2017

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 145

Publisher: CreateSpace

Review Posted Online: Oct. 11, 2017

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UNMASKED

WOMEN WRITE ABOUT SEX AND INTIMACY AFTER FIFTY

A refreshingly blunt chorus of older women’s voices.

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Meier (Ireland, Place Out of Time, 2017, etc.) and debut editor Barry, a psychotherapist, present an anthology of essays and poetry about female sexuality after age 50.

For some women, aging doesn’t mean the end of their sex lives but rather the beginning of new adventures. Liberation from pregnancy fears, child-rearing responsibilities, and menstruation allow them to fully indulge their own pursuit of pleasure. This anthology gives such women the opportunity to speak for themselves—and they do so with aplomb. Nonfiction author Bernadette Murphy discovers the orgasmic perks of learning to ride a motorcycle post-divorce. Lisa Mae DeMasi, whose work has appeared in multiple literary journals, finds that, with reiki practice and essential oils, achieving climax no longer feels like “trudging up Mount Washington with a dead body strapped to my back.” Writer and blogger Rita Bullinger describes how a communication technique called “Imago dialogue” has increased intimacy and sexual satisfaction with her lover: “Communication coupled with oral sex, I’m convinced, is what makes sex at sixty-six the best sex of our lives.” It’s not all excitement and discovery, however; writer Lola Fontay shares the unsettling experience of witnessing a man masturbating in front of her at the end of their first date. Poet Becky Dennison Sakellariou considers the legacy of silence around women’s desire: “A woman like me is invisible, if she is not, / she should be, an anathema, a sin.” But many writers here use humor to talk about the havoc that aging can wreak: “Just when we have our act together the warranty goes out on the equipment,” says author and professional speaker Sally Franz in her hilariously prescriptive essay “Tweaking Sex After Fifty.” The authors also often address sex with tact and sensuality: “Sometimes then, long-married / bodies, after stuttering into sleep, / curve into long slumbers of silk yesses, / yesses loud enough to waken dreams,” writes poet Brenda Yates. Toward the end, the bad online dating stories do become a bit repetitive. But there’s a diverse array of perspectives here, each unique enough to keep readers intrigued.

A refreshingly blunt chorus of older women’s voices.

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-9990994-4-5

Page Count: 190

Publisher: Weeping Willow Books

Review Posted Online: July 11, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2018

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PASSAGES II

BROWN DOVES

Wise, kind and lively verse that truly “dances to a tune that’s / gloriously redeeming / of anger, hate, and envy. / It’s an...

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Engaging lyric poetry that manages to be sensual and cerebral, fun and profound.

Readers willing to dig deeper than the work of poets Derek Walcott, Linton Kwesi Johnson and Anthony Joseph will find that exciting new worlds of Caribbean poetry await. Although some lesser-known Caribbean writers tend to get bogged down in the exotic fecundity of their island landscapes, others write with a grace and steadiness that highlights personal experience within the larger context of culture and environment to reveal something universal. Trinidadian novelist, painter and poet Drayton (The Crystal Bird, 2012, etc.) most decidedly falls into the latter category. Her personal poems often focus on singular moments in her past, yet her evocation of the slippage between past and present, of how we manage to exist in both times simultaneously, speaks directly to readers. The exploration of how “time…magically overlaps generations” pervades this collection. Her narrators are buffeted by nostalgia but are never fatalistic or cloying; instead, they treasure the past and the present as a single fabric of interwoven threads. One narrator, for instance, revisits a memorable beach and finds that the “scenery I knew has all but gone, / except for the sea. / Longing and waiting, I dream of the days / that never can be again. / The sea waits while I dream a dream / where I stand on the balcony of this precious day.” Drayton invests symbols with a similar complexity; the titular brown dove, for instance, is at once a symbol of maternal devotion, sexual allure, rebellion and quiet endurance, and is rife with gender and racial resonances. Occasionally, her more contemplative poems suffer from excess erudition, and she is sometimes prone to distracting alliteration, but she also delivers unmatched similes such as, “The morning stormed my day / like a drunken party crasher / with streams of gold and white ribbons / coming through the window.”

Wise, kind and lively verse that truly “dances to a tune that’s / gloriously redeeming / of anger, hate, and envy. / It’s an awesome authority / with boundless energy.” 

Pub Date: Nov. 20, 2012

ISBN: 978-1478160045

Page Count: 120

Publisher: CreateSpace

Review Posted Online: Jan. 31, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2013

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