It’s a
commonplace to hear poets, critics, and poetry readers alike say that poetry is
dying and no one reads it any more. Ina literary genre where “bestseller” is
defined as 1000 copies (or fewer), there might be some truth to that
commonplace. Extremely few poets in the English-speaking world as well as elsewhere
make a full-time living from poetry. And what is true for poetry in general is
perhaps even more true for Christian poetry.
And yet poets
keep writing, and readers keep reading. If the health of the genre can be
measured by quality, then the state of contemporary Christian poetry
exemplified in The
Turning Aside: The Kingdom Poets Book of Contemporary Christian Poetry is
very healthy indeed.
Editor D.S.
Martin, who writes the Kingdom
Poets blog, edits the Poeima Poetry Series
from Cascade Books, and is a published poet himself, has selected some 240
poems by 60 poets, defining “contemporary” as including those poets still alive
in the year 2000. It thus covers a broad array of 20th and early 21st
century poetry, including some from the World War I era.
Many of the
poets are well known – Wendell Berry, R.S. Thomas, Dana Gioia, Richard Wilbur,
Luci Shaw, Sydney Lea, Jeanne Murray Walker, Mark Jarman, Scott Cairns, Laurie
Klein, Malcolm Guite, and Christian Wiman. Others are becoming better known,
like Tania Runyan, Anya Kugiorny Silver, and Dave Harrity.
What is so striking
are the quality and the diversity. These poems represent different generations,
and different Christian faith traditions – mainstream Protestant, Catholic,
evangelical, Greek Orthodox, Anglican, and others. For all the diversity, in
this creative endeavor we call poetry, the differences submerge, and the
quality, perceptions, and imagery shine forth. It’s as if the differences
disappear as each poet speaks from the language of faith.
Exodus by Nicholas Samaras
The Lord was as
simple as walking
into evening. We
stepped out of our lives.
The tea on the
fire, the bread in the bowl.
My book lying
face up, open at the page.
Choosing the
Lord was a simple as walking
forward, the
trust of a child holding onto you,
your own trust
settled like believing,
the doors open
into a cool, unleavened
evening.
What’s
especially memorable here are the contrasts between the fire and the bread on
the bowl, and then the “cool, unleavened” evening. So few lines, and so many
packed images.
Another
wonderful selection is a poem by Laurie Klein.
Unbelief by
Laurie Klein
Collection Editor D.S. Martin |
Begin with the
body:
holy, breathing,
real—how we know;
later, call it a
book of curves,
home, riddled
with contradictions.
Ask those who
design, and
by design,
deceive: Which is true?
a coin toss, or
vote?
an aqueduct, or
a well of salvation?
a seven-veil
dance worth one life,
or half a
kingdom?
Or picture
Moses and Paul,
head-to-head,
curled around
time, two halves,
one voice, their
ropey, blue-collar
topography
riveting as a river
flicking a
skipped stone,
as if each word
cast is a net
enclosing a
silver fish—arc
against air—half
a second
and one small
glimmer
all it takes to
re-aim a skeptics gaze.
Martin has done
exceedingly well in selecting these poems. They are the stuff of faith, with
all of its assurances, grace, doubts, and contradictions.
The Turning
Aside is a moving collection of poetry, demonstrating the vitality of
contemporary Christian poets and the beauty they create.
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1 comment:
Just those first few poets you mention are enough to make me want to read this.
Thanks for bringing the collection to notice.
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