True
Affections: Poems from a Small Town
by
Elizabeth W. Garber
Illuminated
Sea Press $15.00 (paper)
Elizabeth
Garber, the former Belfast (Maine) poet laureate and Stonecoast MFA graduate,
writes with the accuracy of the acupuncture she also practices. She portrays
people living their lives at home in Maine, although sometimes in and around
visitors, with a sense of the day to day elevated to the more universal. Her
poem “The Tow Truck Driver’s Story” comes to us in the voice of the tow truck
driver himself who tells of the time he got up after only one hour’s sleep to
answer an emergency call. He endures three hours of dangerous driving to an
address described as Appleton Ridge “Then a man in, I kid you not, a red /
satin smoking jacket comes out and waves. / I think he is waving at me, and
wave back, but it’s a garage door opener and out of the dark / a door rises,
lit like a museum, / a car, glittering white and chrome beauty, / it was a 1954
Mercedes.” The driver asks if the man in the smoking jacket is going to take it
out. “Oh, no, we just got back from Jamaica / I want a jump to make sure it’s
ok.” The book includes local tastes, too, with “Ode to Cider” and “Ode to
Rhubarb”. “Oh rhubarb, Spring’s tart sourpuss, too often / insulted . . . .”
Garber’s colloquial style makes the poems easy to read, and yet, they all
convey a greater insight into the value of the seemingly mundane.
2 comments:
Yeah I am also practicing acupuncture therapy at a professional clinic of acupuncture in Mississauga. Firstly I learnt the basics of acupuncture and now getting the practical training. I want to become a certified acupuncturist so I will also take admission in the certification course in this year.
Good luck with that. Although I don't practice acupuncture myself, I have a great respect.
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