Book Reviewed: Homelight by Lola Haskins
Reviewed by: Claire Matturro
Lola Haskins
If a group of bears attacks your village, lie still. If they are not fooled, fight back with everything they are trying to rip out. If this means you have to set fire to your country, do it.
The most deeply personal poems are those in “The Slapped Girl” and in “Rehearsing.” One of the poems in those sections is a bittersweet, haunting love poem entitled “Though We Can Never Be Together.” In only twelve sublime lines, the poem captures both a story and a feeling, beginning with this line: “I live with you / in the interstice between breath and breath / in the cool damp hollows tides leave in the sand” and ending with these words:And I wear you the way a Sikh wears his cord under his clothes in token of the ineffable beauty of the world.
All in all, these are rich, layered poems of beauty and transcendence which once more establishes Lola Haskins as a poet worthy of her many accolades and worthy of reading, re-reading, and cherishing. Lola Haskins’ poems have been broadcast over the BBC and her work has appeared in such prestigious publications as The Atlantic, London Review of Books, The New York Quarterly, Georgia Review, Rattle, Prairie Schooner, and others. Her body of work also includes thirteen previous collections of poetry, a beginner’s guide to the poetry life, and a non-fiction book about Florida cemeteries. Twice nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, she has been honored with three book prizes, two NEA fellowships, four Florida Cultural Affairs fellowships, the Emily Dickinson/Writer Magazine award from Poetry Society of America, and many others.Dominion By Lola Haskins, from Homelight and used with permission We name the birds and think those are their names but our throats are helpless when calling flights pass over and we can’t taste the earth that comes up with the worm in a robin’s beak nor in the worst moments of our lives can we approach the way an owl sobs. We analyze the sky using charts one phenomenon at a time yet when light pierces the clouds like our visions of God we turn into open mouths and when that light enters us no matter how much we want to keep it because we do not have the tools we can never. We wade through undergrowth whose leaves and sticks are our words for them but the nodules and stitchings on our ankles will always know more about plants than we do and we have no idea what to call the way trees dwarf us nor when we hold them how to interpret the patterns their barks leave on our cheeks. We have stories but we cannot parse them so when we step on a seedling struggling through a crack we never think of Cain and Abel nor does the way water cascades towards us from high and ancient rock bring Rapunzel to mind nor when we look at the stars do we remember As it was in the beginning. When will we understand that all our classifications are only attempted dust? That nothing pinned to a card is true? That sight and hearing and taste and our hearts and our brains and the tips of our fingers are like yellow butterflies? Reach for them and they are gone.