| Named one of two finalists for the 2010 Pulitzer
                        Prize in Poetry,  as "a collection of poems
                        remarkable for its variety of subjects, array of genres
                        and nimble use of language." Gleeful and gorgeous, delighted by puns and other wordplay
                        (including words from French, Latin and Italian), Estes's
                        fast-paced free verse, rich with internal rhyme, takes
                        rightful pride in the beauties it flaunts and explains.
                        Her fourth collection finds, for recurrent motifs, saints'
                        lives, medieval manuscripts, gold leaf and the alphabet: "hearts bloom / out of Ds like lamb chop sleeves / in the
                        script
                        of the fifteenth-century / scribe"; in a gilded Book
                        of Hours, "the letters / have fallen out of the words
                        and lie / scattered on the ground." Each deft poem
                        weaves together multiple topics — some art-historical,
                        others autobiographical — through chains of homonyms
                        and knotty analogies: "Take Cover" skates from
                        the French "couvre feu, cover the fire" (the
                        origin for our word "curfew") to disheveled
                        bedcovers and 1950s-style duck-and-cover drills. Though
                        Estes revels in European reference (Dante, Trieste, Greta
                        Garbo), her matchless hunger for experience makes her indelibly
                        American: "how the tongue / keeps lapping the world’s
                        / loot," she exclaims, "even in the 499th lap
                        / of the Indy 500." The arts — from Cimabue’s
                        painting to haute cuisine — are for Estes never mere
                        luxuries; rather, the arts, and our pride in them, give
                        us the only effective countermeasures to loneliness, helplessness
                        and serious pain. And pain — remembered or feared — is
                        always somewhere: "So Near Yet So Far" connects
                        a lunar eclipse, a film starring Fred Astaire and Rita
                        Hayworth, a concept from high-energy plasma physics and
                      "the necklace / of pearls my father bought my mother
                      / for their
                        forty-fifth wedding / anniversary, which she made him
                      / take back."--Stephen Burt, New York Times Book Review
 Whenever                          I see a poem by Angie Estes I prepare myself for serious
                          delight. Who else can move so effortlessly from an
                      Appalachian cornfield to a medieval fresco and back again
                      by way
                        of Rita Hayworth and a couple of bilingual puns? Her
                      timing and her ever-uninhibited instinct for poetic shape
                      are
                          the triumphs of a first-rate musical intelligence.
                      Angie Estes is Fred Astaire and Ginger too: backwards in
                      high
                          heels, forward on rollerskates, never have classy and
                        sexy
                          been better matched.--Linda Gregerson
 In her poem
                          "Love Letters," Angie Estes writes, "I cover secrets, break
                          me and read." And indeed, throughout Tryst,
                          Estes' fourth and most personal collection, the poet gets
                          straight to the heart of love, language, and memory. Details
                          from the rural Appalachian lives of Estes' own family yield
                          to meditations on '40s film stars, medieval saints, ancient
                          Romans--and vice-versa. We learn that gold leaf is applied
                          with a brush fashioned out of squirrel tail, Nijinsky invented
                          a fountain pen he called God, and female prisoners of the
                          concentration camp at Terezin composed recipes to be tasted
                          only in memory: all part of the human passion to create,
                          destroy, and above all, be known. Estes' tryst here is
                          with history and the way it absorbs everything and everyone,
                          leaving words, those most articulate of witnesses, behind.
                          Like the Roman Forum with its dizzying strata of time exposed, Tryst
    is layered, sad, magnificent, and made memorable in and because of language.
    Break. Read.
 Visit Angie
                          Estes' website
 | 
                
                  | 
                      
                        |  |  
                        |  |  
                        | Saying Crows in spring gardens can work their waydown a row, eating all of the newly planted
 kernels of corn, so in the Appalachians, a common
 method for scaring them off is to hang
 a dead crow upside down from a pole
 like St. Peter in Caravaggio's Crucifixion.
                              Because
 he cannot walk, the Japanese deity Kuebiko stands
 outdoors all day and therefore knows everything,
 like my grandfather who keeps standing in this
 black and white photograph at feeding time
 with three chickens, my white duck, his dog
 Buckwheat, and a black cat who follows him, tail
 straight up in the air. In Cimabue's
 fresco of the Cucifixion in the transept
 of the basilica at Assisi, the white lead pigment
 has oxidized, leaving only black space
 where the faces of angels and mourners
 and the hanging body of Christ
 used to be. The negative
 of a photograph we keep holding
 to the light, it burns--a November
 cornfield, husks and twisted stalks
 pointing to a sky the color of blood
 in the vein, the hands of my grandmother
 still aimed in every direction: please pass
 the potatoes, pass the butter, pass the
 time. Around each figure, the aura
 of gold just turning to rust must be
 Aurora itself--her rust, her must--
 which is how my grandfather always predicted
 the day would turn out to be: red sky
 at morning, sailor's warning.
 Copyright c 2009 by Angie Estes. May not
                              be reproduced without permission. |  |