The Songs that Objects Would Sing by Roxi Power

$22.99

 

The first line of Roxi Power’s incredible burst of poems lays down the law with one hand and sets things in motion with another—that is, she writes, as if to remark on the coming noise made by fire, death, love – “A roll of presence infiltrated by scratch and origin.”  What follows is her articulation of such holy noise with its “mess of fictions/ that startle us back to grace.”  And by the end of the book, we’re sitting “edgeward” by the river with the poet as she remarks, almost casually, on “wanting to feel what could swallow us.”  The many motions of this music, of these songs that objects would sing, will brush the reader with a difficult and worthy joy.

–C.S. Giscombe

 

“Who sits absorbed, inside sound’s centerless, edgeless surround?” Power asks, in the elegiac title poem for her mother, “The Songs that Objects Would Sing.” The poems in this book are a call-and-response with the “fragment-songs” of objects, of the landscapes of Wyoming and California redwoods (in a time of forest fires), and of her departed beloveds. With both musical and emotional intelligence, not to mention a linguistic virtuosity, Power conjures hope amid her sonic discoveries—while still bearing lucid witness to personal and community grief.

–Farnaz Fatemi

 

“There’s a ruin inside of everything,” we learn in Roxi Power’s The Songs That Objects Would Sing, “burning / in secret, singeing the edges of sound.”  The book is aflame, both with the literal wildfires ravaging the American West and with the slower smolder of personal grief.  Power’s response to loss and disaster is precisely song–a quirky, plangent song, an “improvisation with certain stationary / facts” shot through with humor and underpinned by a rippling ostinato of lyric power.  Her keen observations of the details of life lived amid fire–the “silk slips” of irises, a broken hummingbird letter-opener, a candle flame reflected in a piano’s deep finish–draw us intimately into “the mute acceptance of objects / to receive our fragment-song.”

 –Mark Scroggins

 

 

Description

The Songs that Objects Would Sing

by Roxi Power

Full-length Paper
$22.99
979-8-88838-330-8
2023
Roxi Power’s The Songs That Objects Would Sing is a poetic meditation on transience through the lens of objects people leave behind.  C.S. Giscombe writes, “The first line of Roxi Power’s incredible burst of poems lays down the law with one hand and sets things in motion with another—that is, she writes, as if to remark on the coming noise made by fire, death, love, ‘A roll of presence infiltrated by scratch and origin.’”  Power’s elegies and ecopoems reconstruct new linguistic meeting grounds for ancestors, where impermanence elicits both grief and joy. Through call and response improvisations, Power invokes Miles Davis’ “Saeta,” Patti Smith’s “strange music,” and the impossibility of Cage’s silence, as counterbalances to forgetting: “frottage rubbed back into likeness enough to help us see what is no longer there.”

Roxi Power is a poet, performer, and labor activist. She founded and edits the trans-genre anthology series, Viz. Inter-Arts at the University of California, Santa Cruz where she teaches. She received an AWP Intro Award, and her poems have been widely published. Power performs original scripts of Live Film Narration, or “Neo-Benshi,” around the country. She holds an MFA in Poetry from Cornell University and lives with her partner and daughter in Felton, CA.

 

 

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