Cloud of Ink
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
On the surface, L. S. Klatt’s poems are airy and humorous—with their tales of chickens wandering the highways of Ohio and Winnebago trailers rolling up to heaven and whales bumping like watermelons in a bathtub—but just under the surface they turn disconcertingly serious as they celebrate the fluent word.
Under the heat of inquiry, under the pressure of metaphor, the poems in Cloud of Ink liquefy, bend, and serpentine as they seek sometimes a new and sometimes an ancient destination. They present the reader with existential questions as they side-wind into the barbaric; the pear is figured as a “wild boar” and the octopus is “gutted,” yet primal energies cut a pathway to the mystical and the transcendent. The poetic cosmos Klatt creates is loquacious and beautiful, strange and affirmative, but never transparent. Amid “a maelstrom of inklings,” the writer—and the audience—must puzzle out the meaning of the syllabary.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Terse, unpredictable, and wonderfully weird, Klatt's second volume shuttles between dreamt visions with animals and skeptical takes on modern sites. At first Klatt's short phrases, with plenty of white space between them, suggest the comic neosurrealism beloved of so many poets these days: "Chickens/ depend on wishbones// and their smelly parts set off alarms/ near Dayton." Comedy mixes with dead-of-night dejection, and Italy shines (though Ohio predominates) in poems whose alienated locales, seen slantwise, dissolve into symbols of life and of death: "Who knows/ what, what// said who, in a great, crow-filled tree." These techniques surprise readers, but also hold the poems together: each has not only oddity but unity (so that they come closer, in the end, to the W.S. Merwin of the 1970s than to almost anyone writing today). One sonnet-sized poem begins "Salmon packed in ice are not swimming, they're saving": it proceeds through its bizarre remarks ("they will flip-flop at the spa") to a solidly sad conclusion about impossible salvation. A poem called "For Lack of a Better Word" becomes a manifesto for the half-concealment that Klatt's poetry demands, and for the harsh emotion that emerges when the same poems are reread.