|
Poetry Step By George AlbonCiting Oppen's "moment in which one has not yet found terms," Step follows its quarry along the braided stream of the body, tracing the shifting boundaries between language and thought. Here is a poem whose formal coherene belies the stability of its chosen structure: tercets catch and release the line, its "liquid voice" purling among their confines, murmuring of meaning both contained and abraded by its passage through form. Marking the dissolving destinies and residual beginnings of speech, Step evokes a shimmering surface where backgrounds and foregrounds interchange, "as though the/ lack were open/ to reach through" and "a point gotten to/ is not finally point" but a rift in vapor. Inside an experience, there exists a harmonics of inchoate and articulate thought. With perfect pitch, Albon amplifies this moment before the mind delimits experience into a universe of emergent truth.
George Albon is the author of Brief Capital of Disturbances (Omnidawn, 2003), Thousands Count Out Loud (lyric&, 2000), Reading Pole (Seeing Eye Books, 2000), Transit Rock (Duration Press, 1999), Empire Life (Littoral Books, 1998), King (Meow Press, 1994), and Possible Floor (e.g., 1990). His essay "The Paradise of Meaning" was the George Oppen Memorial Lecture for 2002. He lives in San Francisco. 2006 66 pages $15.00 ISBN: 978-0-942996-57-9
|
|
![]() |