art, Book Reviews, poetry

The Stars Will Remember, a review of “End of Earth” by Nolcha Fox, art by Mike Armstrong. Reviewed by Peter Mladinic

The Stars Will Remember, a review of End of Earth by Nolcha Fox, art by Mike Armstrong. Prolific Pulse Press, Raleigh, NC. 2024. $15.95 paper, $4.99 Kindle.

Perhaps in a future ions away, the stars will remember life on earth, the life of planets, animals, and humans, which is precisely what Nolcha Fox is writing about in End of Earth, a document of that life in poetic lines about people, places, and things in her past and present. Her poems, each of them, are complimented by Mike Armstrong’s paintings, that are vivid, abstract, and evoke impressions suited to the particular mood of each poem. In her point of view, sensibilities, and brevity, Fox is our contemporary Emily Dickinson, and very much herself, her own person. Three devices that make her utterances poems in End of Earth are metaphors, personification, and repetition.

      Greed is the subject of “They Circle.” Hucksters, charlatans, thieves who misrepresent themselves, preying upon the vulnerable, are “money vampires.”  Fox sets up a scene of roadkill and vultures. Outrageously, the roadkill, a dead possum? is speaking. With three words “a second look” Fox shifts the scene, from outdoors to indoors, and a person, perhaps by a computer, and perhaps indoors. Part of the poem’s economy lies in this ambiguity. The speaker could be indoors, or in an outdoors market, or even in a mall. Then she smoothly goes back to the roadkill.  Form and content meld. Just as vultures circle in the sky, imagery takes the reader back to the beginning. And then also, there’s the “cook” and “spatula” kitchen diction, adding another dimension, evoking the density of texture needed to make a poem about greed that is powerful in that less says more. Fox indeed knows her way around a metaphor.

     The sun is personified as feminine, as in the adage “when the fat lady sings,” in “The sun throws,” again with great economy. So, in the middle the euphony of “singing snow into icicles” signals a shift in imagery. In eight lines, a roof, a mountain, and a stage all fit wonderfully into this poem, with its structure of personification, a poetic device Fox uses satirically in “Gardening.”  The wonder of “Gardening” is that the statement it makes is not only for today, but for times past. The human characteristic of stupidity is given to plant life. It’s a thing people cultivate, thus the garden itself becomes society, a broader and abstract entity, as in social media. The gardener “tells her friends stupidity” is a good thing, that it will provide nourishment and health, like a squash. The colloquial “buy” followed by the agricultural “stalk” conclude this poem in which the speaker means the opposite of what she says, and the import of what she says is achieved by personification: an attribute of human nature manifests itself in the form of a plant.

     Fox employs repetition with variation well in “Pieces and Parts.” “No one sees…No one takes…When each one walks…,” a poem in which a “thingamabob” coexists with a “coffin” and the self interacts with the other. The tone in “Pieces and Parts” is defiant, the speaker defies nothing less than…death, (which is perhaps why Emily Dickinson wrote poems). In Fox’s “If I Can’t Overcome” the tone is resolved. Its structure of repetition, “let me be…let me be…let me be…let me breathe…let me welcome” lends to its elegance. 

                              …let me be the stillness 

                              that seeps into the clouds 

                              before the rain.

                              Let me be the silence

                              that soothes the branches

                               just before the wind

                               announces snow…

     Just as Mike Armstrong creates lines, angles, circles, squares, and other shapes that move through a visual pattern, Nolcha Fox creates lines that move through a verbal pattern. Reading her poems and coming back to each yields appreciation as well as pleasure. Whether light-hearted or dead serious, she is always exacting. She runs a gamut of human emotions and experience in poems that stand not just for today but for times past and times to come.

About Peter Mladinic:

Peter Mladinic lives in Hobbs, New Mexico. He was born and raised in New Jersey and has lived in the Midwest and in the South. He enlisted in the United States Navy and served for four years. He received an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Arkansas in 1985, and taught English for thirty years at New Mexico Junior College in Hobbs. He has edited two books: Love, Death, and the Plains; and Ethnic Lea: Southeast New Mexico Stories, which are available from the Lea County Museum Press, as are his three volumes of poetry: Lost in Lea, Dressed for Winter, and his most recent book, co-authored with Charles Behlen, Falling Awake in Lovington. He is a past board member of the Lea County Museum and a former president of the Lea County Humane Society. An animal activist, he supports numerous animal rescue groups. Two of his main concerns are to bring an end to the euthanizing of animals in shelters and to help get animals in shelters adopted into caring homes. In his spare time, he enjoys yoga, listening to music, reading, and spending time with his six dogs. Recently, his poems have been published in numerous online journals in the US, Canada, England, Ireland, and Australia

Website

Book Reviews, books, poetry

A Path to Follow Home – a review of Words into Elephants by Nolcha Fox Reviewed by Peter Mladinic

Words into Elephants is a work of imagination.  For its brevity and exactitude the book it comes closest to is Richard Brautigan’s The Pill Versus the Springhill Mine Disaster.  Both books’ personal point of view reflects the human condition. For Fox meaning lies in metaphor, in manipulation of sound and rhythm, and in ironies that convey poignancy and humor.

   Most of these poems have metaphors. Metaphors seem an integral part of the poet’s thinking. Her collection begins with “A broken promise.”  The promise is given the tangibility of a plastic thing, for example a model plane or car a person has built. Once broken, “No glue can put it/ back together.”  The recipient of the broken promise takes  “Its shards” into a dark alley and dumps them in a trash barrel, under the debris of “good intentions.”  This extended metaphor implies betrayal, disappointment, and perhaps regret on the part of the person who broke the promise.  “I have big dreams” suggests self-worth.  The speaker is a pearl in a seashell, safe and hidden from “sharks.”  But she will “upgrade/to a pickup truck and camper shell,” figuratively come out of her shell, to travel, and “see the world.”  Fox makes this imaginative transition with no waste of words, to suggest where there is life there is hope. In “Morning is a river” he, crossing that river, stumbles “on stones/ of a life of almost/ but not quite.”  A comment on human aspirations. The sand on the riverbed contains “metal findings/ enough to build a cage/ without a door.”  Perhaps “he” has worked his way into a trap of his own making.  

   The sense is in the sound. Fox uses full rhymes for resolutions, slant rhymes for partial resolutions, and in “Borderline” repetition with variation, “sense, no sense, “nonsense” to evoke ideas. “Colors Are Running” ends with the internal rhyme of “car” and cigar.” “Coordinated,” with its humor, has a structure of alliterative c sounds. “Fragments” is enveloped by the slant rhymes of the first line’s “through” and the last line’s “gloom.” And in the middle of “My muse” the end rhymes “her” and “bender” lend a comic, colloquial tone to this poem about the muse.

   Just as metaphors come natural to Fox, so does irony; it has to do with her world view.  She does not shy from the dark side, nor does she hesitate to find humor in it, when humor is appropriately called for. A dark humor is at work in “a swerve.”  The speaker has crashed her car into a guardrail, avoiding a deer in the road. She observes her flat tire.  The first thing she thinks of is not to call for help, but how that tire reminds her of a cake she baked, perhaps earlier that day. Another poem that jars expectations with its irony, to humorous effect is “Dogs and buttered toast aren’t cats.”  Noting subtle differences between these animals, the speaker calls the cat “a dirty dog.”  This is a very exacting and skillful poem, one of many.  Irony has a poignant effect in “I stuffed my anger,” a poem that beings with “a glass marble” and ends with “a flower;” and “Sad seagull,” with verbs “shatter” and “pierce.”  The speaker says the seagull doesn’t want to leave and doesn’t want to stay and calls on the seagull to “Fly me on your back/ across the ocean.”  In her evocation she speaks not only for herself but for humankind.  Lastly, irony is used powerfully and poignantly in the final poem, “Your cigar is missing,” which suggests familiarity with the dead man she addresses (Your cigar is missing from your grave) and words of caution to the dead woman buried beside him. “Let her find out…when she can’t get away.”  This is a dark, ironic poem that taps into memory and emotions of the human condition. 

   Elephants into Words is a book of compact poems that “hit the mark” again and again.  They evoke the whole gambit of emotions, their ultimate topic, what it means to be alive.  They are the word creations of a poet who writes to know and discovers as she writes.  That is all to the delight of her readers. Each poem is a brief adventure in language, an imaginative flight grounded in the reality the world we share.

Words into Elephants – Nolcha Fox


Thank you to Peter Mladinic for this excellent review.

Learn more about Peter Mladinic and his latest poetry collection.

Announcements, Book Announcements, Book Reviews, books, Celebrations, poetry

ANNOUNCEMENT! Hoods of Motherhood by Lindsay Soberano Wilson is now Available!

HOT NEW RELEASE!

How do we reconcile the outdated notions of being a selfless matriarch with a modern-day understanding that being a mom is about learning to give back to yourself in order to give to others?

How do we learn to accept what it is we wish to hold from our matriarchs and yet also release to become empowered mothers with our own wants, needs, and values?

In Hoods of Motherhood: A Collection of Poems, Lindsay Soberano Wilson, a first-generation Jewish Canadian granddaughter of Romanian Holocaust survivors and Spanish Moroccan immigrants, compiles a bittersweet portrayal of becoming a mother. From the highs and lows of recurrent miscarriages to contending with c-section shame, to larger issues such as intergenerational trauma, and everyday issues like breastfeeding, Soberano Wilson’s first full book of poetry, is relatable, lyrical, and confessional with evocative imagery, allusions, wordplay, rhyme, and rhythm.

What Others Say

The at once soft and brash reality of motherhood is paired with the beauty and nostalgia
of mothering in Hoods of Motherhood by Lindsay Soberano Wilson. The poet’s truthful treatise on both the resilience and challenges and joy and humor of motherhood will be familiar to anyone who has been a mother or had a mother. Soberano Wilson masterfully captures the dance we mothers create as we find balance between being mothers and self-flourishing. While the poems are rooted in the experience of motherhood, fierce and tender, they catalyze the ancestral healing of past, present, and future generations.
Hoods of Motherhood earns a permanent place on my bookshelf. 

Aimee Brown Gramblin, Writer and Poet

***

This lyrical collection buzzes with energy, beautiful imagery and memorable ruminations on everything from parenthood to art to our natural world. Soberano-Wilson is definitely a
poet to watch.

David Silverberg, founder and former artistic director of Toronto Poetry Slam,
author of As Close to the Edge Without Going Over (ChiZine Books)

***

Lindsay Soberano Wilson’s “Hoods of Motherhood” is a collection of deeply personal and introspective poems that offer a lyrical and evocative exploration of the themes related to the experience of motherhood, including personal history and self-care. In her poetry, Wilson contemplates the challenges of raising a child while reflecting on the impact of her family’s history and trauma, including the Holocaust and the experiences of its survivors. Through her writing, Wilson engages in a healing ritual, using poetry to cleanse herself of these experiences and find solace and understanding. Her evocative language and poignant imagery invite readers to immerse themselves in the emotional landscape of motherhood, where the mundane details of daily life blend with the weight of historical memory, creating a rich and textured tapestry of human experience.

Michal Mahgerefteh, Managing Editor, Poetica Publishing

***

This is a powerful collection about the challenges of motherhood. Readers will be drawn
equally to the relatability of the themes and the impressive wordplay. Fuelled by a passion, each poem deftly explores the polarizing nature of parenthood with a jaunty writing style that is as explosive as poignant. Whether the stereotype challenging “Down With Cool Girl” or the lyrical “Our Sanctuary”, this collection is consistently engaging and enlightening.

Scott Carter author of Blind Luck and Barrett Fuller’s Secret

About The Author

Soberano-Wilson graduated from Concordia University’s Creative Writing program and went on to earn a Master of Arts degree in English Literature from the University of Toronto. She is a member of the Canadian League of Poets. Her poetry has been published in Fine Lines Literary Journal, FreshVoices, The Embrace of Dawn, PoetryPause, Quills Erotic Canadian Poetry Magazine, Canadian Woman Studies
Journal, Poetica Magazine,
and various anthologies, and online literary magazines and blogs.

Her debut chapbook, Casa de mi Corazón: A Travel Journal of Poetry and Memoir (Poetica Publishing), is a hybrid journal of poetry and memoir about how her sense of community, identity, and home was shaped by her past travels.

She has demonstrated that her brazen, yet gentle voice, speaks to an audience as reflected by her growing following across social media platforms, such as Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Medium.

Where to Find

Hoods of Motherhood: A Collection of Poems is available on several platforms and can be accessed via the following:

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

BooksAMillion

IndieBound

WalMart

and Other Online Retailers

EVENTS

Virtual Book Launch

Live Book Launch

Hoods of Motherhood will be featured at a live book launch where you can meet the author. This will be held at Flying Books・784 College St.・Toronto, ON More June 22, 6:30-8 p.m. EST