Beautiful, beautifully

Dag T. Straumsvåg, But in the Stillness.  Ottawa, Ontario: Apt.9 Press, 2024, 80 copies.

apt9press.com

What do I mean when I say that Dag T. Straumsvåg’s poems are simple?  I mean that they are not “deceptively” but rather deliberately simple.  They wish for clarity and directness—to be what they appear to be, to say what they appear to say. 

Straumsvåg is a Norwegian poet who writes in English.  And this simplicity makes “But in the Stillness” a fine manuscript for Apt. 9 Press, whose editor and publisher, Cameron Anstee, has made a specialty of publishing poems that are direct, imagistic, and accessible.  But it is even a more perfect fit because the occasion for these poems is Straumsvåg’s learning of the death of Nelson Ball.  Ball, whose own brief, haiku-like works began to receive more attention in the later years of his life, has been a guiding light for the press.

Here is a joy-filled poem that reveals to us a world of poets connected to one another by interest and by friendship:

A box of eight

beautiful, beautifully

signed books

from Nelson Ball

landed

in my mailbox

on April 14, 2017

with a thump!

That day I felt good

about everything

in my life.

Don’t you find that “thump” so pleasing?  An earlier poem has informed us that Nelson Ball is terminally ill and so perhaps that knowledge also informs our reading of this poem, without diminishing the joy.

Not all the poems here refer to Ball; some are just about mosquitoes and insomnia and sitting down to pee.  There is an abundance of humour, that most human of responses to bad news, which seems to colour this two-line poem:

The houses don’t move. The cold doesn’t move. Silence

goes from door to door like a vacuum salesman.

In a later poem Straumsvåg learns that Ball’s assisted death has been scheduled and that another poet (Stuart Ross), the one who introduced Straumsvåg and Ball by email, would be attending.  Here the circle of poets seems to be lovingly drawing around the dying friend.  Meanwhile, Staumsvåg wonders how people in a room near him can be laughing, and writes a poem called “Accuracy” dedicated to Nelson Ball whose opening is a fine distillation of Ball’s own approach:

landing

A

universe

on

the

tip

of a leaf

While many of the poems are this brief and slim (much like Nelson Ball’s work), there are a good number of prose poems here that have more of a solid dailiness, a sense of larger life to them.  A nice example, “August 15, 2019” has the poet getting up at five a.m., making coffee, sitting at his kitchen table, watching people go by while remembering the night’s downpour, etc.  I like these poems very much, perhaps more than some of the lyrics that feel occasionally like attenuated haiku.  It’s in one of the prose poems permeated with sadness that we learn of Nelson Ball’s death.  But how lovely that he immediately follows it one day later with “The Morning Poet (August 17, 2019) in which the poet tells of how he loves reading Nelson Ball’s work morning, noon and night.  Friendship, love, joy, sadness are all emotions evoked with simplicity and depth in this touching tribute.

I jumped on the trampoline

Kevin Mcpherson Eckhoff, Circadia.  Kentville, Nova Scotia: Gasperau Press (Devil’s Whim Chapbook #37), 400 copies, 2018.

http://www.gaspereau.com

Turns out it is possible  to cover a whole poetic year in a 32-page chapbook.  All one needs to do is condense each month into a single poem, and to do that all one needs to do is write a single line a day.

This appears to have been Kevin Mcpherson Eckhoff’s strategy in the clever, personal, funny, occasionally self-indulgent and highly readable Circadia.  Here are the first lines from “January,” naturally the first in the 12-poem series:

I fried some Mennonite sausage.  I watched 18

Minutes from somewhere in the middle of Pirates of

The Carribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.  I got a

Birthday card.  I cleaned the hedgehod’s hutch.  I

Lifted some weights.  I learned that I have anterior

Spondylolisthesis, coinciding with a previously

Fractured pars interarticularis, which sounds way

Worse than it is, I think.  I finished a crossword

Puzzle.

During the year we discover that the poet has a female partner, two young boys, does some acting, watches parts of movies, is quite handy around the house, doesn’t have sex, does have sex, lifts weights annoyingly often, drinks a lot of coffee, takes care of the garden, wishes he could live in a big city (he’s somewhere in B.C.), has a best friend, will save a kitten when necessary, doesn’t like to kill small creatures (even accidentally), rolls down hills and holds his children when they nap but sometimes grows tired of them, runs, drinks, and cuts down his own Christmas tree. 

I suppose these are prose poems, since they are set ragged right rather than with line breaks designated by the author, and there are no other signs of prosody.  There is an awareness of more prose-like rhythm and sentence length, although as far as I can tell no deliberate rise or fall or other shaping of the order of events.  One poem ends with “I wanted a pet bat” and the chapbook’s last line is one of many references to food: “I ate three slices of homemade pizza.”  The special moment is not privileged over the ordinary.  Almost all the lines begin with “I”—clearly a deliberate strategy and partly responsible for the feeling of self-indulgence, while also keeping the other figures in the background.  But hey, aren’t we all really Matt Damon in the movie of our life?

Are there times when I wished for a little more depth, or emotional vulnerability, or surprise, or even just a moment of lingering sadness?  Sure.  But maybe Kevin Mcpherson Eckhoff isn’t that sort of guy.  Maybe he’s always moving on to the next chore, the next game with the kids, the next slice of pizza.  I bet he makes a swell best friend.