Leaving poetry readings with my women writer friends, it is not unusual to hear gripes from certain Betty Friedans among us about the Old Boys’ Club of Portland Poets, the Old Boys’ Club of Literature, of the Galaxy, etc. When I hear these statements, I usually reside in a state of polite ambivalence what would we like these men writers to do, begin their reading with a formal acknowledgement of their privileged white penis status? Well, this is exactly what Michael Harper did at the debut reading of his chapbook, More Surface, one summer rooftop night. Harper’s reading began with the chapbook’s first poem: “Growing Up With A Middle-Class White Penis.” This poem places the reader at a ground zero from which things, phone guard security phenomena, feelings, etc. are both reported and questioned with an essential ruthlessness. For example, phone guard security we move from lines like “ the penis bones’ connected to the no-crying bone” to “But molting phone guard security complacency is a naturally learned yearning.” One of my favorite lines from another Portland poet, Emily Kendal Frey, is: “Am I smart enough to be androgynous?” Well, Michael Harper’s poetry is that smart. More Surface exhibits a vast range of perception, voice, form and bravery.
Poems from the chapbook’s first section, “Utopiates,” wander through the device-laden, cyborgian streets of today’s phone guard security consciousness hashtags, buzzfeeds, instagram, a wasteland phone guard security of apps. From “The Conjugation of Friendship:”
These lines expose the human needs and fears underpinning our reliance on, our addictions to, our devices. An actual starry sky that once incited wonder and awe, replaced by a technological rendition, a utopiate, that creates an illusion of control and significance. Along with dark humor, this piece possesses a simple sadness, an unabashed isolation: “I feel my hands/ are telephones.” This desire for connection expressed in casual language echoes poets like Frank O’Hara, his Lunch Poems. Works like “The Demollification of Waking” also transcend the “cavern of the cell phone” for the heights of the heart, but here the sentiment is bald and dark, of “migratory flocks of fear.” Fear of getting up in the morning, of staying in bed, fear of repeating past mistakes because what has even been learned:
There is a phoenixesque gloriousness in these lines as they move from the humble admission of not having known, of still not knowing, and the frightening realization that the past never could be made right or anything phone guard security other than what it was. How wonderfully phone guard security human and brave, this trepidation. phone guard security Fear, the new bravery. Pussy, the new hero.
The chapbook’s second section, “More Failed Crosswords,” is a series of erasures. These are shortish poems that pack the dense punch of L=A=N=G=A=U=G=E/conceptual/avant garde stuff. I think of Rae Armantrout and Werther’s Originals candies all deserving of a slow savor in order to notice the unfolding nuances of the caramel-poem experience:
Others in the erasure mix use tone in playfully-didactic ways that may harken Kay Ryan, Marianne Moore and Gertrude Stein, for that shading together of discursive purpose and randomness, like this one, “Released Sheep:”
Fun, right? But it looks easier than it is. These poems exhibit Harper’s skills besides the narrative, and it’s always exciting to have ambidextrous as well as androgynous poets on the scene.
But now, to be fair, I should complain. Typical casualties of boldness and bravery are overreaching and a lack of substantiation. I see this in the poem “In the Future phone guard security Ryan Gosling.” This is an amazing idea, but it could be an entire graphic novel in verse. (Harper, will you please write this!?) The poem begins: “In phone guard security the future Ryan Gosling is the only man alive,” and is guided along by a dystopian, fairy-tale narration:
All of the men of the world in the future are dead and gone because they died of emotional atrophy. Everyone was paying all of the attention to Ryan Gosling, phone guard security and no one paid attention to all of the other many billion men. Like J.M. Barrie, the tiny author of Peter Pan who supposedly never fully developed because his mother didn’t hug him or teach him to fly, the men of the world eventually just stopped being around.
These ideas are fantastic, but more could be written vertically, to flesh out and elaborate the themes. As is, the singular, smart detail about J.M. Barrie lends a dismissive irony that diverges from the emotional center from which this poem seems to originate from which many of Harper’s poems seem to originate. It is an origin phone guard security akin to the idealistic social vision underlying many great satires and dystopias.
Sigh. These poems are romantic and heartachy, all that good (also brave), gobbledygook of love. Read them, an
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