Reviews of Small
Human Detail in Care of National Trust
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"Small Human Detail
in Care of National Trust is a terrific first book by a diversely-gifted
young poetpart romantic naturalist and part political scold, throughout
a believer in a 'theology of the particular.' Reading these poems I find myself
marveling at the way Martin Walls brings his incisive, historical intelligence
to bear on the humblest of landscapes; not only can he mobilize a cinematically
global range of poetic referencefrom Basho to Vallejo, Oppen to
Plathbut he knows how to zoom in the focus on images as evanescent
as his dragonfly with 'wings salvaged from the skeletons of willow leaves.'
'Salvage' is no idle word in this book. Martin Walls is a writer who seeks to
save what is necessary not only from the ravages of time, but from the sociohistorical
forces in whose trust we are all, willing or unwilling, held."
Campbell McGrath
"In fact, I simply
love this workits intelligence, its grace and patience and surprise,
its 'small human detail' which nevertheless enlarges the world. Martin Walls'
poems have the stillness and depth of genuine meditations, be they about wrecking
yards or cicadas, great aunts or x-rays, the Wabash River or the poor lost soul
who throws himself before a train while the town fills up with the corn refinery's
'sweet-sick smell of syrup.' That syrup in thereto feel the sadness
in such a thing. . . What I mean isthis is a poet you can trust
with the whole terrible and lovely business."
Marianne Boruch