NEIL LEADBEATER Reviews
My Chocolate Sarcophagus by
Claudia Carlson
(Myrmaid
Press / Marsh Hawk Press, 2016)
Claudia Carlson was born in Bloomington,
Indiana and has lived in Manhattan since the age of 22. She majored in English
and Art History at SUNY Stony Brook and most of her working career has been
spent as a graphic artist designing book covers and interiors in publishing
houses. She is married to the playwright and lyricist James Racheff. Both her
daughters, Natalie and Caitlin, are involved in the arts.
Her first volume of poetry, The Elephant House, was published by
Marsh Hawk Press in 2007. This was followed in 2013 by a photo / poetry book
called Pocket Park. Both books were
well-received.
The present collection comprises 22 poems
plus a sequence of five poems dedicated to a close friend and fellow writer.
All of these poems are of an intensely personal nature written during a time of
hospitalisation when undergoing palliative care for terminal cancer. They are
brave poems from a poet who is not afraid to express her emotions. One of the
many strengths of this collection is that the poems look outward rather than
inward – they are poems that are addressed to family and friends and the
outside world. The dedication says as much. The poems in this collection are
remarkably calm and life-affirming. Some of them are even humorous. All of them
are beautiful in their own engaging way.
The title juxtaposes chocolate with
death. It is as if death is something that melts in our mouths –and, as a
title, it is undeniably original. Some hold that death is life’s greatest
adventure, the soft-centre of bliss. Carlson certainly softens the edges with
this unique take. Her hope is that we all go out in style. Love is all that
matters in the end. The first poem in the collection, "Wellspring," picks up on this point. It comes from the rich and
bountiful source that informs all of her writing:
I am giving things away
Love mostly
---
It feels so good
My heart does not empty.
Inevitably there are poems in this volume
which are set in the context of cancer and of medical care. Titles such as "First MRI," "2nd Brain MRI" and "Random Abdominal Tumours" speak for
themselves but even here, Carlson eschews positive thinking. Undergoing
magnetic resonance imaging, she closes her eyes and summons up a swarm of bees.
She hears
stillness in the roar
the hum is louder than you think...
I watch the bees pulse in and out of
clover
it could be summer again
I could be well.
The poem "Hospitality" is also skewed towards the positive. As the title
suggests, it is a poem that is more about engaging with other people than it is
about the place where it is written. The entrance to the hospital is described
as "The Porch at the End of the World." Porches
are thresholds to another place. They are also signifiers for the Stoic School
of Philosophy (from the painted porch in the Agora of Athens, where Zeno
taught). The image ties in neatly with the author’s own stoic attitude towards
her situation. She makes reference to the other people who are described as "guests" (not patients) and of how they
all "discuss sunsets with authority"
when they are "hale enough to rise and see
them." She may long to feel the air outside but she can still appreciate the
beauty of a sunset.
In "The
Body Takes the Soul for a Walk," Carlson shows us how a shaft of sunlight
across the floor gives her a sudden awareness of the cycle of the seasons and
how much they mean to all of us. "I need
another spring," she writes, "I need
another spring." There is sunlight in the next poem, too, which is, for me,
one of the most beautiful poems in the book. This is the poem called "Venus on the Hudson" – a wonderful
evocation of innocence and experience when she looks back to her 17-year old
self
running tenderly on the pliant grass and
thrusting roots
hiding finding in the shadows my lover,
my self
flinging ourselves in the light we forget
everything
but our incandescence
in the field behind the school
years later I found we had an audience.
I can’t be embarrassed.
It wasn’t me but the spirit of summer.
Remembering the good times is
life-affirming. In "Fuck Cancer 2," she
tells us that her distractions are "novels,
chocolates, wine, flirtations..." and who would argue for one moment with
that? Forced at times to confront her condition, she stoically states in
language that is plain and powerful:
The body goes on as well as it can
until it can’t.
The line-break, coming where it does,
changes everything.
The sequence of five poems addressed to
her close friend Deborah is very moving and speaks of the regret that "life is so short. Was I insufferable?" she asks at one point, and then adds:
I try to be sincere, dying demands it.
There is humour in this collection, too.
In "Pickup," Carlson gives us an
amusing account of her mother’s foreign cars which were "prone to metal fatigue." On such occasions, when the
little car would bang or choke and go
slow
and slower still... we’d coast to the
curb
of human kindness.
Carlson
plays cat and mouse with her readers over the title here; is the poem about
pick up trucks or pickups? Writing this poem at this particular time, is there
not also an unspoken analogy about the failings of the human body?
"Agony Aunt’s Toolkit for
Young Women" is another
poem that is full of robust humour. It‘s a kind of self-help kit for her
daughter Caitlin "for tinkering with
common assholery." The poem titled "Living
It" is equally amusing and written for her other daughter, Natalie.
In "Sweet Dreams," Carslon once more
accentuates the positive. It is poems like this that make the collection a real
winner.
...I
believe in fall afternoons.
The
yellows of the leaves are lemons
Against
the blue and gray tablecloth of sky.
How
lucky I am despite weakening.
In closing, I would like to return to the
Deborah poems and to these two lines in particular:
We
each bring all our possibles
To the last hour.
This is exactly what Carlson has done
with this book of poems. They are a last-flowering of something beautiful from
someone who clearly has so much to say about LIFE. A thoughtful parting gift to
family, friends and readers. May you go gently into that good night.
*****
Neil
Leadbeater is an editor,
author, essayist and critic living in Edinburgh, Scotland. His short stories,
articles and poems have been published widely in anthologies and journals both
at home and abroad. His most recent books are Librettos for the Black Madonna (White Adder Press, Scotland,
2011); The Worcester Fragments (Original
Plus Press, England, 2013); The Loveliest
Vein of Our Lives (Poetry Space, England, 2014) and The Fragility of Moths (Bibliotheca Universalis, Romania, 2014).
Thank you for this lovely review.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThe poems are delightful, powerful and moving. It's a great book, Claudia!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the review. Makes me want to read the book. Thanks. Important points are made - including that love is what matters.
ReplyDeleteYes, it's a lovely book. We saw an advance copy. The printed book will be out in early 2016.
ReplyDeleteI missed you, Claudia
ReplyDeletesorry that should be "miss"
ReplyDelete