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Alaskaphrenia Christine Hume Winner of the 2003 Green Rose Prize Named as a "Book of the Year" for 2004 by the Small Press Traffic Literary Arts Center. The harsh reality
of Alaska drives these poems inward in search of a habitable world, though
they mostly find the Snow Mans nothing that was there.
For winter pierces the brain direct and usurps even the imagination:
this is a place where fantastic animals stand beside real animals.
In spite of such obstacles Humes mind wittily and triumphantly takes
wingbeyond what it knows and toward whatevers uncertain
is alive. Alaskaphrenia
is unlike any other book I have readas indebted to Melville as to
postmodern poetics, its pleasures are terrors, and yet all its terrors
are sly and seductive, and necessary. Even if youve never
seen a dead person before, your body will know what to do is a typically,
disturbingly ambiguous lesson the book has learnedthis Alaska-of-the-mind
Christine Hume offers us is a glittery, glamorous place of old words and
new syntaxes, of elemental dangers and pleasures previously unknown to
American poetry. It is, like Alaska, American and not, a place of plenitude
and claustrophobia simultaneously. Youll want to live there because
it exhilarates. "Hume has not
outfoxed intelligencewith her way with words, her sound chains,
her rhetorical detours, her artistic cunning to poetically reinvent, and
distractshe has wooed it. Her words most often remin us of our inability
to know what a poem is. If her forms distrupt expectations, they do so
in a world made cunningly. We are armed with our capacity to imagine.
The consciousness stays painfully awake. How, these poems ask and with
dark humor, can words still sing in the music of noise?" ". . . Alaskaphrenia
combines seamlessly its feelings and the high-concept, place-creating
theories it comes from. The poet's intellectual imagination and emotions
never clash here; neither one loses sincerity from being given too much
priority. Emotional density and Hume's active imagination meet perfectly
to create a huanting book of disease, mainly a mental disease called Alaskaphrenia." "If you put Gertrude
Stein and Jack London into the machine from the movie The Fly,
and mixed their DNA, this is book the reconstituted poet would write.
These poems create and recreate a physical and a
metaphysical Alaska, a kaleidoscopic, scary Alaska of the mind, where
not only nature it seems, but language too can kill . . . Reader, be brave.
Breathe deep; step into the frontier Christine Hume has opened for you. "And
although this book has plenty of surface glitter and language play, most
of Hume's lines are not mere showpieces for her virtuosity. The book as
a whole is almost relentlessly severe, lonesome, and flavored throughout
with pitiless admonitions such as, 'Bears in spy skins approach. Never
let what you think fool you.'" "Humes felicitious aural patterning puts a sensational spangle and spin on her words. Her poems reward and reworld multiple readings with deeper ever and more pleasurable mystery." Heidi Lynn Staples, Verse Magazine "In Christine Hume's new book Alaskaphrenia, she creates a work that is just as much an exploration of the Alaskan landscape and mythology as a cartography of human consciousness. Her poems, dense, abstruse, and sometimes touchingly human, like the mythical worlds first discovered by ancient mariners, both draw upon and collapse the distinction between dialectical extremes we use to create meaning in the world." Greg Hill, Bridge Magazine "...Hume risks
the very impossibilities she so effectively exposes, and ventures daringly
into these most extreme territoriesinterior and exterior, textual
and terrestrial." |
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New
Issues Poetry & Prose, Western Michigan University, Dept. of English, |
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