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A weekly e-newsletter from the publisher of Chronogram containing:
Up-to-date Mid-Hudson events, listings, selections of insight
for conscious living, and social & political commentary.
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Feature
Literary 2003: BOOK REVIEWS
Buddha Wept
Rocco Lo Bosco
Buddha
Wept, a first novel by Rocco Lo Bosco, is the story of
Ona Ny, a visionary mystic and artist who survives the Cambodian holocaust
under Pol Pots despotic rule in the 1970s. Through the telling of
one familys experience living with the daily presence and cruelty
of the Khmer Rouge, the book raises universal questions about humanity,
suffering, hope, life, death, and violence. The writer, like his main
character Ona, is driven by the belief that our suffering can be transformed
into something meaningful in order that we may contribute positively to
the world, and so that pain does not consume us.
One of the best things about Buddha Wept is that it raises questions that
cant be answered, and the strength of the book is that Lo Bosco
doesnt try to. Why do humans prey upon each other? What is the source
of our commitment to live life, regardless of how desperate the existence?
The characters struggle within their extreme dehumanization to understand
that there are some things that just cannot be explained. Onas teaching
to us is that one has to make peace with that in order to keep oneself
from drowning in despair. Her small triumphs of spirit occur in day-to-day
life, as she refuses to lose her dignity and deny her humanity, mostly
in the form of asserting her love as a mother. She risks her life and
confronts soldiers and a Khmer Rouge commander in order to visit her dying
child in the childrens labor camp. This is one of the tender moments
of life under an oppressive regime Lo Bosco conveys; in the midst of hopelessness,
senseless work, Ona fights to keep her heart and mind intact in a world
that seems to have gone mad.
The most uncomfortable part of the novel was the epilogue in which Lo
Bosco drops all pretenses that he is using his main character as a vehicle;
the characters in the book suddenly disappear after a brief synopsis of
chronological events, and we are simply left with Lo Boscos voicean
I that makes disclaimers about cheating by repeating
Onas words. This thinly veiled way of making sure that the reader
understands what the major questions of the bookand of human existenceare
does not do justice to Lo Boscos powerful theme and his message:
That it is each of our responsibility to own and channel our suffering
for good. I admire Lo Boscos motivation, but the delivery could
have been more effective.
Valerie Linet
Gundruns Tapestry
Joan Schweighardt
Who
is this mysterious woman, and why is she risking everything for an audience
with Attila the Hun? The opening pages of Gudruns Tapestry introduce
us to a determined, savvy woman on a mission, traveling under an assumed
identity in a time of great change. Literacy and Christianity are in their
infancy, dwarves and frost giants are vivid in recent memory. Gudrun opens
her tale by musing that perhaps it should take a different formthat
of a lay sung in the Great Hall to a spellbound audience.
Schweighardt proceeds to draw us effortlessly into Gudruns heart
and times. Flashing back from her imprisonment in the camp of Attila to
her girlhood and youth, we experience a feudal Europe where life is harsh,
often shortfathers still routinely kill sickly infants at birthand
ruled by the whims of a pantheon of gods more powerful than mortals, but
no less mischievous, greedy, and even jealous. So intimate is the connection
we make with Gudrun that we can comprehend her spiritual exaltation as
a lamb is sacrificed and shared, bringing the family closer to Wodan.
Gudruns family has been forever changed, decimated by invading Romans
and mercenary Huns. Depression and bitterness rule. But Gudrun, young
and full of hope, finds joy in the attentions of Sigurd the Frank, and
comfort in the company of her younger brother, Guthorm, allowed to survive
despite his disability. The web of intrigue, emotion, and jealousy that
begins when Sigurd rescues a mysteriously beautiful woman who claims runic
powers builds to a shocking, tragic climax.
Throughout the family dramaand the political one that surrounds
itwe are aware of how little has changed about the human heart.
Daily living may have revolved around physical survival, quests, and dragons
goldbut love, grief, greed, and envy are as real as they are today,
family dynamics just as capable of creating mischief, children just as
mischievous. Gudruns lifeeven her transformation into an assassinis
as believable and fresh as yours or mine.
Schweighardts got a lyrical, graceful voice and good psychological
sense, so that Gudruns tragedy, healing, and eventual quest never
slip into the realm of soap opera. It might be unexpected to find a literary
novel based on ancient lays and factual history thats also a genuine
cant-put-it-down page-turner, but this is that book.
Anne Pyburn
Hannahs Gift
Maria Housden
Hannah
at three is the kind of luminescent, impish child one thanks the gods
for every dayfunny and caring and intelligently stubborn. Hannah
is the embodiment of the life force.
Hannah is dying a lengthy, painful death. As the mother of a daughter
Hannahs age, I knew this would not be the easiest book to read.
Its not. Maria Housden lets us into the nightmarethe initial
diagnosis, the agonizing decisions, the decline that is at once interminable
and far too fast. I defy anyone human to read this book without tears.
If youve ever wondered how a parent could survive such pain, Housdens
walk through the valley of the shadow is enlightening and strengthening.
We adults, of course, base our thoughts about death on a cultural mythos
built on fear. To Hannah, in her newness and wit, its more like
the other door of a room. She doesnt need to become as a little
child to comprehend the Eternalshes already there, and is
able to offer glimpses of that reality to her parents, brother, and doctors.
The agonized mother is wise enough to become her daughters pupilalong
with primary caregiver, defending tigress, and number one fanand
although nothing can truly mitigate such enormous pain, Hannahs
insights and courage lead Housden on a spiritual journey that will shake
her out of complacency and change her world forever and eventually for
better. Concepts like faith, love, and healing are distilled to purest
essence, stripped of clichés, and made new.
The book also offers much wisdom for those who need to convince an often-stubborn
medical machine to bend the rules and display its human face. Hannahs
parents are determined to maintain quality in a life so shy of quantity.
To some extent, they succeed; one of the books sweetest moments
comes when Housden, after Hannahs death, learns that her daughters
journey through the childrens ward has led those in charge to greatly
humanize their policies.
In less tasteful hands, this story would have been in danger of becoming
maudlin. Housden just lays it out: imperfect humans, unbearable tragedy,
stumblingand stunningpersonal growth, and a sense of the immanent
presence of an underlying reality that can take the nastiest horrors and
turn them into teaching tools. Hannah is here to help us. It is wonderful
indeed that she was born to a mother who was able to let her clear, small
voice be heard.
Anne Pyburn
Wandering Warrior
Da Chen
Luka
is born to be emperorit is foretold by the very moles on his feet.
But the circumstances in which we meet him are hardly imperial. With his
mentor, the beggar-monk Atami, each day is a struggle for basic necessities.
Atami is training Luka in the mystical and martial arts he will one day
need.
Atami, the only caregiver the 11-year-old has ever known, is captured
by minions of the evil invaders who hold China under their sway. Luka
must fend for himselfand thus begins the classic young heros
journey through imprisonment, betrayal, and a series of narrow escapes.
A good heart, quick mind, and ancient Kung Fu knowledge bring him through.
There are comrades, of coursea couple of homeless street kidsand
fantastic creatures to befriend and battle. The bad guys are ham-fistedly
evil. The exotic Chinese backdrop and the eternal, universal nature of
youthful curiosity and brashness work together wellanybody whos
ever been to middle school will recognize the bad vibes Luka encounters,
Holy Boy or no, at the temple school he finds himself attending.
Da Chen has fun with the story, racing from one episode to the next, throwing
in lots of humor without talking down to readers. Luka may be a Holy Boy,
but hes neither a prig nor a walking example of perfection
hes a kid, wise beyond his years but still capable of getting scared
or letting his ego sneak up on him once in a while. The villains are loosely
disguised petty bureaucrats of the worst sort, a type children certainly
need to be warned about early on.
By books end, Lukawho when first encountered was starting
to chafe at the strict regimen of study a Holy Boy must followis
thinking that days full of study of spiritual knowledge might not be such
a bad thing after all, a message parents ought to appreciate. One doubts
Lukas life will stay placid for longnot while the evil Mogoes
still hold China in their sway, not while there are still magical treasures
to be reclaimed, not when hes just discovered the secret of his
paternity, not when he and lovely, courageous young Hali have just been
reunited.
The plot may be faintly reminiscent of Harry Potter or Star Wars, but
the Oriental landscape of Chens own childhood and his unpretentious
tone create something thats more than a little different. And the
themethe heros journey, the wisdom needed to become a righteous
warrioris one that never gets stale.
Anne Pyburn
India Poem
India Radfar
India
Radfar explores Indias geography and recovers its spirit through
meditative poetry found in India Poem. In every untitled poem there is
a thoughtful grace that becomes a brief moment of solace. Radfar feeds
her experiences of visiting India to her readers in small savory mouthfuls;
each poem is to be chewed and rolled around the mind, tasted intently.
Radfars India Poem envelopes the conflicts and harmonies found in
the earth, beast, and humanitys communal existence. Each poem is
a brief meditation that Radfar explains in actions occurring within her
as well as in the physical land of the country for which her namesake
originates. In one of her poems Radfar describes walking in a body of
water and seeing another person wading also. Radfar exclaims out loud
this is India! The reader can interpret this line as
Radfar observing the country but it can also be taken as Radfar declaring
her own existence. At the end of this poem Radfar realizes that she is
not in the water and that there is no horizon and everything is
liquid. Radfar then asks is this what it looks like / inside
my mind?
Radfar also utilizes simple actions with colors to describe the scenery
of her poems. In several of her meditations Radfar establishes her love
of color; the absence of colors in many of her poems seem to evoke the
idea of loss or death. In one poem Radfar says beyond heat is color;
she breathes life into landscapes with her colorful descriptions when
she writes swimming through rain / the cries of yellow birds.
The colors Radfar chooses to describe a moment communicate the emotions
of that scene; several poems present pictures of despair black crows
/ gray silk / we have lost the blue formality / of living.
India Radfar brings her journey through the mind and country of India
to the pages of India Poem and allows her readers to observe the meditative
pictorials she writes. On each page readers can engage themselves further
into Radfars thoughts and ideas while tasting the essentials that
the land has to offer. Radfar informs her readers that ragas need
rain and / we need meals in the rain / eating slowly / bowl after bowl
/ including sweets. These meals are Radfars poems, eaten slowly,
becoming as pleasurable as sugar to the tongue.
Amy Ouzoonian
Always the Mountains
David Rothenberg
Why,
when we need our philosophers the most, have they fallen so far from fashion?
We used to have thinkers; now we have commentators, mathematicians, artists,
physicists, rappers, therapists, and editors. We have life coaches, consultants,
and comedians; we have sports reporters.
David Rothenberg is, unabashedly, a philosopher. Always the Mountains
isnt about mountains, though it contains its share of summits, along
with mountainous thinking by Petrarch, Dogen, Diderot, Muir, Abbey, and
others. Rothenberg is concerned with what it means to be human, both in
and out of nature; what it means to remove ourselves from nature, yet
strive to preserve it. Along the way, we read of artistic elephants, the
follies of the Internet, eco-cultural restoration, the need for deep ecology,
the doubtful provenance of words attributed to Chief Seattle. We follow
Rothenberg as he grapples with the nature of knowledge and knowledge of
nature, from his Mid-Hudson doorstep and the surrounding peaks, rivers,
and valleys.
Rothenbergs writing is by turns challenging, poetic, insightful.
He chases meaning like a lovestruck hound, meandering off the trail to
investigate tantalizing scents and muddy holes along the way, only to
return to the chase with undiminished zeal. The landscape here ranges
from the airily abstract to the ponderously concretefrom the primacy
of the soul to the struggles of Scenic Hudson and Con Ed.
Yes, philosophy makes a difference; but to whom? Asks Rothenberg in his
epilogue:
And do the mountains care? Does the current notice? Does the tide mark
the years or only follow the moon? I want to believe that they do, but
I think they do not. Faith and reason here disagree. We are the species
of worry, concern, and the idiotic power to lay waste to it all. We need
to save this nature from one errant part of itself, or else change our
mission into something that is worthy of the place that has made us possible.
Its a tough spiral of survival, the hunt for an excuse to make necessary
the human race.
David Rothenberg, a musician whose cds have been reviewed in this magazine,
is an associate professor of philosophy at the New Jersey Institute of
Technology. He edits the journal Terra Nova: Nature and Culture and has
previously authored Sudden Music: Improvisation, Sound, Nature; Hands
End: Technology and the Limits of Nature; and Blue Cliff Record: Zen Echoes.
Todd Paul
Tales from the Revolution
Lorna Tychostup
For
the last 30 years, the word revolution has been used lightly;
everything from toothpaste to the latest pop icon has worn out the title
revolutionary. Poet, photographer, and Chronogram senior editor
Lorna Tychostup doesnt reinvent the meaning of revolution
in her book of poetry Tales from the Revolution, she reminds us of the
words true meaning. Tychostup invites her readers to journey with
her through several honest accounts of a revolution that she has struggled
to produce and be a part of through her actions and words; to cause change
in a society human beings have accepted for so long.
In her 23 poems, Tychostup beckons the reader to travel with her and experience
Chiapas, to walk along the beaches with a young lover, to find oneself
in Tychostups fearless world of change.
In a time when women are relegated to the duties of being a housewife,
Tychostup takes a stand in her poem Lost My Mind when she
writes of taking her children and leaving her husband and house to pursue
a life that didnt confine her and helped her to grow. She also writes
an affirmation for her children: I tell my kids not to / ever tell
me / or anybody else / that they love THEM more / than they love themselves.
In her poem The Little One She Feels All the Time, Tychostup
asks her readers to question the norms of societylike
being in a world that judges a human beings worth based on physical
image. Tychostup states that we ought to strike the mirrors from
the house. She fiercely challenges her readers to dare to change
what society accepts as beauty: anorexic made to order / computerized
surgeon assisted redos.
In The Word is War Tychostup defines words that have almost
lost meaning in American society: war and rally,
stress, and distress. She also gives definitions
for little understood words like jihad and intifada.
Tychostup defines these words to remind her readers of the true meaning
of war, just as Tales from the Revolution fulfills the true
meaning of the word revolution: a dramatic and wide-reaching change in
the way something works or is organized or in peoples ideas about
it. Lorna Tychostups poetry in Tales from the Revolution achieves
that and more.
To purchase a copy of Tales from the Revolution, contact the author at
www.lornatychostup.com.
Amy Ouzoonian
13 pOems aSoF
Philip Levine
Phillip
P. Levines recently self-published chapbook 13 pOems aSoF is a mixed
salad of prose poems and free verse that all live in the same bowl. As
a collection, the poetry dwells on language and the search for the right
words. It also explores the dissatisfaction and sense of unfulfilled desire
that comes with a less-than-spontaneous life. There are a couple of non-traditional
love poems thrown in, and still one or two others that left me wondering
about their role in the collection as a whole.
This is a poetry book that will make you think and feel, but it will not
make you comfortableboth because of its content and its dips into
stream-of-consciousness and prose poetry. Levine, who believes that we
humans are desperate to find meaning in our lives, introduces the reader
to a cast of characters who exude a sense of wanting and oftentimes melancholy.
There is, for example, the clown who cannot stop trying, through language,
to connect to the girl in front of him; an awkward and afraid narrator
who wants to howl and liberate himself with words in Tonights
Feature; and the you in Rant 64: In a Minute,
On the Subway, who is struggling with apathy and the desire for
freedom. In this piece, the reader is told that you have probably
never jumped naked into water and that you must let go all
the things you have ever dreamed of.
I appreciate Levines honest reflection of the mind and its movements
and his offbeat images. The poems I resonated most withespecially
because they provide some amount of balance in the bookwere those
that present a sense of hope in the midst of a somewhat burdened life.
Carpentry & Gardening rests in the tangible things of
this world like splinters and lilacs, and acts as a lovely metaphor about
persevering, starting over after hurting someones heart, making
mistakes. The failure and hopelessness of some of the earlier poems shift
into the possibility of momentary redemption in the fabulous Full
Moon Saturday, where one gets a sense of a weary speaker, briefly
turned on and ready to roll because of the full moon. This poem contains
some of the best lines in the collection, with its stanza, But its
the moons move, / And with her one wide eye, she presses hard on
/ everyones pedal. A good move on the authors part;
after so much wanting and trying, it is wonderful to encounter the howl
that Tonights Feature was hoping for.
Valerie Linet
Distant Kinships
Anthony Bernini
In
his first book of poetry Distant Kinships (apd, 2002), Bernini presents
each poem as if it were a story. Berninis poems focus on people
in their environment and the period of time each moment takes place.
The deliberate language use in Berninis Distant Kinships makes his
poetry very precise. Each poem is constructed and every word is chosen
with great care. In his poem titled In This Donut Store, Bernini
captures the essence of being in an urban atmosphere in the early hours
inside a place where customers come in and carry off / the dark
vitality in paper cups. Bernini evokes the image of the walls in
the establishment coming to life when he writes
against the
wall / coffee thickens, turns cool / as the sea around exhausted limbs.
Berninis poems pay homage to the earth and its natural surroundings.
His poems Death Watch, Mass of Resurrection, and
the Matriarchs Funeral Dress are similarthey address
the subject of death as a part of the cycle of life that is inevitable.
While many people may try to strive to hold on to their loved ones, Bernini
lends his wisdom in the poem Death Watch. The narrator addresses
a dying friend: You smile with relief. / They wait near the door
/ like bags of grief / you will not have to open.
In his three-part poem Below The Conklingville Dam, Bernini
writes of the vitality of the earth. He names her elements
and emotions in the form of storms, which come as a response to men causing
destruction. Bernini writes that They, the industrialists
and colonial settlers, had come to evict her, uniforms / badges,
guns, and papers, tool of schemers. Bernini then writes of the building
of the Dam at Conklingville in 1929 as the uncovering of the
valley to an open grave. The poem resolves that evil as well as
goodness exist everywhere.
The poetry of Anthony Bernini in Distant Kinships takes readers in various
directions as far as theme is concerned. However, the one common destination
that Bernini leaves is storytelling. With his thoughtful, intentional
language Bernini provides a structure in his poetry that bears the resemblance
of a storys plot many times over. His main goal in every story is
to share his wisdom of the human condition and the wonder that originates
from the earth.
Amy Ouzoonian
Girls Will Be Boys Will Be Girls
Will Be...
J.T. Bunnell & Irit Reinheimer
How
do you define gender? And once youve defined it, how can and should
you shape your life, and the lives of your children? These are the points
being raised in the new, self-published Girls Will Be Boys Will Be Girls
Will Be...Coloring Book, created by J.T. Bunnell and Irit Reinheimer.
What would the world look like without gender? is not only
the central question but the inspiration behind this homespun,
genderless coloring book (available for a sliding scale fee
of $4 to $6 at colormegenderless@facehugger.com).
Addressing issues of gender inequality is, for someone like mea
liberal, feminist, working, full-time single mother of boysas essential
to good parenting as love. As such, I approached Girls Will Be Boys...
with high hopes. With 19 pages of ready-to-color illustrations (14 of
girls, 10 of boys, and five of both sexes), taken from various sources
(old ads, childrens books, and actual kids drawings) and accompanied
by challenging statements and claims (Toys have no gender;
Clothes have no gender), the book is jam-packed with provocative
material. The only problem is, I couldnt quite figure out exactly
who this material is meant for. On one hand, its a coloring book;
but on the other hand, its text is too sophisticated for toddlers, who
arent going to understand a statement like Just because you
looked up my skirt doesnt mean you know what gender I am!
But while the nine-to-12-year-olds to whom I showed this book understood
what that last statement meant, they werent comfortable with itand
not one of them would be caught dead, at their ages, coloring.
Of course, Bunnell and Reinheimer meant well. Their childhood experiences
of grownups squashing their self-expression and trying to mold their
friends into dainty young ladies and rugged young men, they write,
led them to take action against all the rigid gender roles that
had been unwillingly placed upon them and their friends. They decided
to create this coloring book after discovering Nancy R. Smiths poem
that begins with these lines: For every girl who is tired of acting weak
when she is strong, / There is a boy who is tired of appearing strong
when he feels vulnerable.
Its too bad that the authors didnt stop right there and create
a coloring book illustrating Smiths poem. Nonetheless, I do hope
Bunnell and Reinheimer return to the drawing board with this idea. Their
end-product is a hodge-podge of feminism. So what, my own kids said.
Susan Piperato
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