Carnations
Poems
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
In Anthony Carelli's remarkable debut, Carnations, the poems attempt to reanimate dead metaphors as blossoms: wild and lovely but also fleeting, mortal, and averse to the touch. Here, the poems are carnations, not only flowers, but also body-making words. Nodding to influences as varied as George Herbert, Francis Ponge, Fernando Pessoa, and D. H. Lawrence, Carelli asserts that the poet’s materials—words, objects, phenomena—are sacred, wilting in the moment, yet perennially renewed. Often taking titles from a biblical vocabulary, Carnations reminds us that unremarkable places and events—a game of Frisbee in a winter park, workers stacking panes in a glass factory, or the daily opening of a café—can, in a blink, be new. A short walk home is briefly transformed into a cathedral, and the work-worn body becomes a dancer, a prophet, a muse.
______
From Carnations:
THE PROPHETS
Anthony Carelli
A river. And if not the river nearby, then a dream
of a river. Nothing happens that doesn’t happen
along a river, however humble the water may be.
Take Rowan Creek, the trickle struggling to lug
its mirroring across Poynette, wherein, suspended,
so gentle and shallow, I learned to walk, bobbing
at my father’s knees. Later, whenever we tried
to meander on our inner tubes, we’d get lodged
on the bottom. Seth, remember, no matter how we’d
kick and shove off, we’d just get lodged again?
At most an afternoon would carry us a hundred feet
toward the willows. We’d piss ourselves on purpose
just to feel the spirits of our warmth haloing out.
And once, two bald men on the footbridge, bowing
in the sky, stared down at us without a word.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Carelli's debut introduces a voice as refreshingly contemporary as it is pleasantly expansive in its subject matter. In the first poem, the speaker and his girlfriend play Frisbee in Prospect Park while horses interrupt the scene; in another, two young friends journey down a river and are surprised by older men on a footbridge staring on. In both, the innocuous autobiographical material establishes quite impressively Carelli's tensile strength to meditate, in a colloquial tongue, on matters of faith and spirit; to bend a vaguely iambic line into well-combed tercets, or more subdued free-verse lines. The results are as elegant and eloquent as they are humane and believable. In "The Disciples," among other poems, Carelli considers faith and, in this case, pays homage to Ovid, imagining a conversation in a Wisconsin pub, borrowing poetic rhythms from well-worn Catholic prayers: Ovid, full of grace,/ you'll never survive a night in this snow. So,/ when the drifts take your legs and you call out,/ may I know enough to know it's too late,/ that the time has come to leave you behind."