Stuart Ross, You Exist. Details Follow.
2012, Anvil
Press, Vancouver BC
$16, 978-1-897535-92-9,
120 pages
reviewed by rob mclennan
Honestly,
citizens,
have you heard of time?
It’s
a thing that matters,
like that other thing,
but less. Someone in
the diner said, “Thither.”
Someone
else strutted
into the corner, admired
the landscape, an unfocused
golf course. Please write
a thesis about my behaviour –
I
mean my grandmother.
If
we all shared a single torso,
I
would feel more confident
dancing. Have you noticed
the sky? It’s on top of the trees.
The
straggling professors of trouble
are astonished by the headlines.
They
don’t know who to phone.
They
await further orders
from a double-parked sun.
Soon
all will be rubble,
heaps of slag. See, I have
a topic. I will tell you
my topic when I’m
better prepared. (“YOU EXIST. DETAILS
FOLLOW.”)
Cobourg,
Ontario writer, editor and publisher Stuart Ross’ seventh full-length poetry
collection, You Exist. Details Follow.,
continue the surreal examination of mundane details, fantastic impossibilities,
responses to other writers and their works, variations on the author/self, and
other narrative absurdities. Over the years, Ross’ poetry has become more
meditational, while continuing to embrace disjunctive narrative twists and
surreal turns. Ross plays openly with facts, something he long-ago borrowed
from friend and influence David W. McFadden, the two writers sharing the
variation on not allowing whether or not a story is “true” to interfere with
the telling. The truth itself, however subjective, simply gets in the way,
something any reader of Ross’ work already knows to not let distract from what
the poem might actually be saying.
THE GREAT TORNADO
Grandfather
put my dead turtle by the curb.
I
was older than Grandfather
but kept my teeth in a smaller glass than his.
Father
and Mother made soup every day
and I shared it with my school chums.
the day of the great tornado
my brothers pinned me to the garage door.
My
red hair rippled.
I
had never read a book.
I
watched my turtle lift into the wind.
One of the most
intriguing threads through Ross’ poetry collections over the past few collections
has been his ongoing “autobiographical Razovsky series,” a loose thread that
began as a feature in his collection Razovsky
at Peace (Toronto ON: ECW Press, 2001). Razovsky was the family name that
his paternal grandfather was born with, later Anglicizing to Ross; there was a
moment when Ross considered reclaiming his previous family name, deciding
instead to reclaim as an ongoing semi-fictional character, “Razovsky,” that now
runs through his poetry. There are even some interesting echos
in Ross’ “Razovsky and the Heron” (pp 32-3) of Ottawa poet Stephen Brockwell’s “Karikura” poems from
The Real Made Up (Toronto ON: ECW
Press, 2007). One can only presume that to read enough of these pieces might
create a small portrait of the character. And yet, Razovsky lives within Ross’
poetry, but not yet his fiction. Might there be fiction down the road to
further explore him, or perhaps even some non-fiction, exploring the fact and
the purpose of this semi-autobiographical pseudonym/character?
CONCERNING RAZOVSKY
Where
is the boat that Razovsky arrived in?
What
was the street that Razovsky lived on?
Where
are the letters that Razovsky received?
Who
are these people in Razovsky’s photos?
Why
did Razovsky decide to leave Europe?
When
did Razovsky know they were dead?
What
was Razovsky’s favourite
music?
Who
had Razovsky loved before her?
What
were the causes Razovsky would march for?
Why
did Razovsky refuse to speak Russian?
What
was the last night Razovsky remembered?
When
was Razovsky most likely to cry?
Why
was the letter signed by Razovsky?
Who
put the rock on the stone of Razovsky?
Born in Ottawa,
Canada’s glorious capital city, rob mclennan
currently lives in Ottawa. The author of more than twenty trade books of
poetry, fiction and non-fiction, he won the John Newlove
Poetry Award in 2010, and was longlisted for the CBC
Poetry Prize in 2012. His most recent titles are the poetry collections Songs
for little sleep, (Obvious Epiphanies, 2012) and grief notes: (BlazeVOX [books], 2012), and a second novel, missing
persons (2009). The Uncertainty
Principle: stories, is scheduled to appear in spring 2014. An editor and
publisher, he runs above/ground press, Chaudiere
Books, The Garneau Review (ottawater.com/garneaureview), seventeen seconds: a journal of
poetry and poetics (ottawater.com/seventeenseconds)
and the Ottawa poetry pdf annual ottawater (ottawater.com).
He spent the 2007-8 academic year in Edmonton as writer-in-residence at the
University of Alberta, and regularly posts reviews, essays, interviews and
other notices at robmclennan.blogspot.com