Posts Tagged ‘Ander Monson’

The Available World

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

by Ander Monson
Sarabande Books 2010
Reviewed by Clay Matthews

8

“…even that was gone.”

monson available world coverIt’s tough to imagine what Icarus might have felt when he realized his wings were gone. Fear? Regret? Or was the beauty of flying and being so close to the sun enough to keep a smile on his face on the way down, plunging into the vast water below. I’ve always been a fan of the elegy in poetry and in life for its ambivalent circumnavigation of what’s gone, what’s been lost. In Ander Monson’s new book, The Available World, we find a loose retelling of the Icarus story, and a speaker who’s trying to come to terms with a technological world where nearly everything is ephemeral except for the constants of human emotion and questions about our interaction with the world.

Brian Mchale wrote that the shift from modernism to postmodernism is best characterized as a shift from epistemology to ontology—from questions about knowledge to questions about being. I’ve never been that good with philosophy or theory, and for me, it’s tough to draw a line in the sand between the two -ologies. The ocean always comes back to wash it all away. In this book, Monson finds a way to bridge the questions and apprehensions that a technological world presents to an individual—questions about self, what’s real, what we can or should hang on to when everything seems to eventually wind up in code or buried under re-runs and Wal-Mart bags. In the poem “Sometimes the Air Surrounding Me Is Sudden with Flowers,” we find a speaker waiting with others in an emergency room watching E.R. What saves this poem, and the book, from falling into some ironical gesture toward an absolute hyper-reality, though, is Ander’s attention to the details of the other people in the room, and the circumstances of a tough world:

We are surrounded by: black eyes,
blood blisters, broken legs,
bruises in the shapes of circus animals,
a variety of burns.

The list goes on, and grows more strange and brutal, until the final couplet of the poem: “It’s as if I’ve never seen / the world in which I live before.”

There’s often a moment of awareness in these poems that shakes the speaker into interaction. This book is filled with sermons—“Sermon in Ribbons,” “Maybe Visionary Sermon,” “Work-Related Injury Sermon,” “Sermon for the Day After the Last Missed Apocalypse Prediction,” and so on. The sermon form here, though, is not didactic or easily described, much like Ander’s treatment of the elegy and the apocalypse. There are no easy answers, only the brief moments in life we find ourselves comfortable in—in laughter, love, sex, etc. Even Icarus can’t help out, come back from the dead (though never really gone) in “Slow Dance with Icarus,” as he states This is not a lesson, / and I don’t know and haven’t learned or stayed / in school no more than him or you.”

Monson carries out a dappled narrative of a family in this book—traumatized by catastrophe, frequented by a brother with no arms and Star Trek and Stand By Me actor Wil Wheaton. There are plenty of laughs here, tragedy, and gizmos that scoop us up and spit us out as random digits; in short, you’ll find a buffet of the available world here: Suave, Chevies, zombies and getting hitched in Vegas, to name a few. This world presents itself in moments, and then those moments vanish, as in the final lines of the book, Monson writes: 

Did I say sorry for the house? I think
it had collapsed already. There was a zero
there last time I saw it: then even that was gone.

But, I’m usually an optimist, so I see those things living on in memory—whether that memory is a hard drive, a mind, or some deeper collective memory of the world. That’s my take on it, though, and like Icarus, I don’t have any good answers as to whether or not that’s right. So buy this book. Find out for yourself.

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Our Aperture

Friday, February 15th, 2008

by Ander Monson
New Michigan Press 2007
Reviewed by Jackie Clark

7.5

Heart-Shaped Book

monson cover

Ander Monson’s chapbook Our Aperture is 30 pages of poems that feel huge, but huge in the sort of referential way one wanders through subway stations and feels like s/he is seeing the whole shape of the moment, encapsulated and removed, a participant.

These poems revolve around and around the “I,” and gratefully the “I” is less of a judge and more of a participant. The concern or conceit of this “I” involves a genuine understanding of the way circumstance colors our situations and the way that something which is pushed responds by being moved: “What came after the world: / silence, lots of it.”

There are three poems in this chapbook with the title “Availability.” The subject matter of these poems is what one might expect: quasi-lists of things that are available and of ways to be available. But they also go further than that; much of the language is recycled and recontextualized in each poem. Even the forms change; some just pour down the page, and others are neatly tucked into in even stanzas.

Some begin like stories: “In the midst of darkness, this presence / is also always and it will be it…” Others start in medias res: “What is also is always.” But to look at the idea of availability from the point of view of someone who has occasionally been made available or who seeks availability calls into question just what it is one looks to be available for, and at last, the many methodical ways in which the concept itself can be deconstructed.

While all of these poems broke my heart, the one I marked up most was “Exhaust”:

streaming exhaust
out of a pip that leads to the heart of the world
where great things are constantly being created
from scratch

 And:

Who
cares about now. Fuck the moment. I want the next
one, and the one after that: result, proceeding, the dark
heart of it out of reach of the streetlight, flashlight,
motion-detector floodlight you installed
to keep the world out of your heart.

The poignancy of this greed for more and more moments weighs heavy on the chest; the image of the floodlight as protector of the heart made me think of the way one might move around slowly late at night, understanding that the lights are motion detectors and that turning them on is a bad thing. The tender and careful feeling I get from this makes my own heart feel less exposed if only because I am reminded that there are other little hearts out there guarding themselves as well.

The title Our Aperture cleverly suggests joint ownership of the speaker’s split. It can be read as collective sigh and protection, or as instance of failure—of flaw or blip that is unfortunate but unavoidable, as many things turn out to be when reasoned enough. The last poem, “Any Vanishing Point is as Good as This,” reflects this:

half-hopes
of the family viewed only from above
from such a distance that love disappears.

Perhaps there is a limit to love’s extensions and perhaps the place where this is true is safer.

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