Sunday, 10 February 2008

jeffrey franklins for lost boys



JEFFREY FRANKLIN'S FOR THE LOST BOYS

"If you tell a sad story in a bar,

people will laugh, and you

must feel better."

Whenever I read a book for the purpose of reviewing it, it becomes a

kind of Rorschach test of my biases and sensibilities. In the margins,

and on any other surface left blank between the book's covers, I

scribble notes about those things that surprise me, inform me, move

me, puzzle me, and sometimes perplex me.

On the title page of Jeffrey Franklin's For the Lost Boys, I wrote,

"Keen observations--Jeff has something to say--these are vignettes

from his daily life--a wide range of expression and emotion--pleasant

in their sounds, their poem-ness." And about those lines about "a sad

story in a bar," I wrote, "See page 44. How true."

For the Lost Boys (Ghost Road Press, 2006) is Jeffrey Franklin's first

book-length collection of poems. The poems are diverse in their style

and his subjects range from family to travel to women's lipstick.

Constant throughout is a dexterous use of language and music.

Two poems that I think represent the best of Mr. Franklin's writing

are "The Gun in the Chair" and "Cookin' with the David Jones Trio."

"The Gun in the Chair" leads us to a genuine insight into our human

nature. Participating in such discoveries is a primary reason I

read--and write--poetry. In "The Gun in the Chair," I felt led, with

that sense of inevitability that is in a good poem, to the conclusion.

A conclusion that is still surprising.

THE GUN IN THE CHAIR

My first shot caught him cleanly

in the crease of his hip

as he lay on his side in a sniper's pose,

a crippling wound at the least, probably

death, if paintballs were bullets.

I had chosen my moment,

ducked from the cover of warped plywood

nailed between aspens, and sprinted

through the close trees, crouching to pant

among the sagebrush of the open prairie.

Running hunched over the clasped gun,

I circled his position, pinned down as he was

by the pneumatic twap-twap-twap

of my partner's fire.

I would like to say

I noted the Ming blue of the sky,

admired the patterning of the aspens,

their bark a creamy green khaki,

but instead I felt a quietly murderous joy.

He was, is, my son.

I had not wanted to join in this game,

the current war raging and open-ended,

he nearly of age. How could I be sure

he would know the difference I just

had forgotten? He and his buddies

cajoled me, but it was I who chose to play.

After all,

I had seen the gun, known to see it,

in the broken-off chair leg, its tapered foot

a nozzle, the two spindles, hacked short

with my father's saw, spaced just right

for machine-gun handles, and I knew

how to make that sound with my tongue

like bursts of rattle-snake mojo,

then yell, "I got you, you're dead!"

I would like to say

I yelled it once more when I saw

the unnatural splatter--pink blood!--

in the crease of his hip where he lay,

but the down vest crumpled there

softened the impact so that for an instant

he did not register the hit, as happens

to some in the heat of battle,

and I, I chose instead

to shoot him again

this time on the skin of his arm,

the welt a red-rimmed crater days after.

If I could understand why I did that

we might do without war.

I would like to say

paintballs are only paintballs

not bullets, but then

the chair would be only the chair.

I also read and write poems for the pure pleasure of language, and its

ability to help us celebrate our lives. From that perspective,

"Cookin' with the David Jones Trio" is, for me, about as good as it

gets. This poem showcases Mr. Franklin's skills as a poet and let's

his personality shine through. His technical decision to arrange the

poem in tercets performs both musical and metaphorical functions. All

of which results in an homage to a father that can be physically and

emotionally felt.

COOKIN' WITH THE DAVID JONES TRIO

Life is fun when you're good at something good.

--William Matthews

In Saturday's kitchen in jeans,

Dad wound-up his wrist,

looping the fat yolks

into a pinwheel of yellows,

concentrating ease

into speed, and just let

go, let the greased

sockets of the wrist spin

on the elbow's flywheel, let

the eggs, as if by their own

momentum, merge into

a smear of galaxy and rise

with the ring of the whisk to fine-

beaded froth. Last night,

the jazz trio's pianist

urged the first few notes

from between his shoulders, listening,

eyes closed, for them

to alight somewhere far

away, then followed or

was pulled along like a man after

spilled papers, the wind

cartwheeling them now in overlapping

riffs, shavings of sunlight

tumbling across the emerald

lawn and down the rumpled

hillside into the shared-steeped

funk beneath the trees where

the bassman joined him,

approaching thunder felt

in the ground, in the bones, startling

a flung fist of starlings

from beneath the eaves of

the baby grand, a swoop

of notes dispersing, satin

shadows rippling across

hedgerow and rock-wall off

the fringe-lipped precipice,

the drummer's snare and slash

of cymbals, the foot-pedaled

drum jumping hearts

into our throats and out

above the dazzling waves,

miraculous suspension, oh,

take me, let me go

let me hover in the wind's

chamber, drift up and

eddy in a thermal, even

as horizon comes a sweep

of thunderhead, hot rain

strafing the city, its

soot-grimed cars riddled

with leopard spots, tenement

windows rattling prismatic

streaks, a whale's moan

of sweet anguish from a thumb

drawn across the conga's

skin, the arse-end

of a handle sliding down

the cymbal's brass spine,

and ending when the eggs hit

the skillet, the sizzle buttering

our appetites for artifice made

natural, grace given back

by hands that thank. Thank you,

Dad, Daddy, Daddio.

Poems like these make For the Lost Boys worthy of attention.

Naturally, not all its poems rang true to my ear. Sometimes, the

ordinary event at the center of a poem didn't quite measure up to the

high language used to describe it, and more than one poem left me

feeling let down by a forced epiphany. (I suppose these statements

reveal my bias toward plain language and understatement). In the end,

Mr. Franklin has something to say, and he says it well.

This is the second book from Ghost Road Press I've had the pleasure to

review. As was the case with Steve Meuske's A Mnemonic for Desire, the

production value is high and the cover art, in this case a painting by

Jim Franklin, is consistent with the book's mood and feeling. Ghost

Road Press can be proud of this book, too, as can its author.

posted by Shawn Pittard at 9:00 AM

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