I never wonder why

John Levy, Guest Book for People in my Dreams. Cobourg, Ontario: Proper Tales Press, 2024, 150 copies.

propertalespress@gmail.com

This production from Proper Tales Press (published by Stuart Ross) reminds me of some of the first chapbooks that I saw in the late seventies and early eighties with its hand-drawn cover and untrimmed pages.  That Levy lives in Tucson, Arizona also makes it different; most chapbook houses here only publish Canadian writers but Proper Tales doesn’t care about such boundaries. 

I can see why Levy’s poems appeal to Stuart Ross, as they have a clear, seemingly plain style with no interest in language that elevates or obscures.  They are very much of the moment (sometimes even being dated), feel almost conversational, and have more than a touch of playfulness.  Let me say outright that they appeal to me, too.

In one of the place and date-stamped poems (we also get the temperature, a comfortable 63 degrees Fahrenheit), “La Jolla, Thursday Morning, 914/23,” Levy tells us that he has just remembered that today would be his late mother’s 100th birthday, interrupting the subject that he had intended to write about, and which he then drifts into (spending an hour watching a lone heron).  It’s interesting to note that the memory doesn’t bring any explicit sense of sadness or prevent the poet from experiencing the moment.  In fact, the poet seems to have (at least in his work) a tranquil, accepting, appreciating temperament.  It’s hard, for example, to imagine someone writing an upbeat poem about Sisyphus but Levy imagines him closely observing with enjoyment the changing shadows on the hill he must perpetually climb.

A couple of poems that I particularly like use the similar strategy of finding seemingly endless possibilities within some small thing.  Here is the first, in which a book collector considers a question in a way that has the effect of both opening it up and shutting down the skeptical interlocutor:

The other poem, “Note to Dag T. Straumsvåg” (whose chapbook I reviewed on June 1, 2024) is a wonderful visual game in which the poet imagines what that floating circle might be: a porthole in a ship, the letter’s dream, a halo thinking about the alphabet, etc.  But Levy doesn’t just leave it there, finding a way to express both the “distance and closeness” he feels with this poet friend he’s never met in person.

There’s a touch of surrealism in a few of these poems although they never lose their grounding.  In the title poem he imagines everyone who appears in his dreams signing a guest book, including his parents who “will write their names // most often”.  Self-Portrait as a Self-Storage Unit is an extended metaphor rather than a transformation.  But I like just as much the more ordinary moments and I’ll end on this one:

…in a poem

I never wonder why I’m

in it, it’s not like those times of walking

into a room and forgetting

why I moved there.

Road trip

Ben Robinson, Between the Lakes Cont. The Blasted Tree, 2024, 50 copies.

http://www.theblastedtree.com

A continuation of an earlier chapbook published by above/ground press, Between the Lakes Cont. recounts the author’s attempt to drive the boundary of the Between the Lakes Treaty of 1792. This I know not from the chapbook itself but from the publisher’s website. The web also informs me that the treaty, made between the Mississaugas of the Credit and the British Crown, includes some three-million acres of land between Erie, Huron, and Ontario.

Although largely shorn of personal detail, we do hear that the poet is driving a hatchback, has lunch at a fry truck, and uses the washroom in a Dairy Queen. Is this little chapbook meant as some kind of political statement? Not obviously so, although it has informed me of the treaty’s existence and reproduces the words on a sign noting the “defeat of the Cherokees by the British (no date).

What I like best is the sense of travel, of southern-Ontario sites passing by the window, of moving on that the long lines, lined by hyphens, convey:

The chapbook ends with an unfinished line (“each passing storm”) suggesting that this road trip is not over yet. Drive on, Mr. Robinson.