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Annie Finch |
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CALYX, A Journal of Art and Literature by Women Winter 2008, vol 24, no. 2 CalendarsAnnie Finch Review by Cindy Williams Gutiérrez Annie Finch’s Calendars is a collection of poems linked by a captivating circling: a circling of time and a circling of sound and thought. Your blood will listen, like a charm. /…/ your blood will listen, every time (“The Menstrual Hut”). This is a contemporary book of hours shining with chants, carols, and elegies that remind us of the mysterious holiness and wholeness of life: and the one and many, whole and part, / touch to blend, to marry in their own time, / to keep all movings’ rhyme— (“A Wedding on Earth”). Your black lines weave a trousseau from Reclaiming the oral power of poetry, Finch widely explores the use of repetition in this collection—repeating sound, word, phrase, and line in a myriad of combinations. In “Imbolc Chant,” she repeats a refrain as an invitation to linger with her for the return of the sun: Wait with me. See, she comes circling. Then in “Final Autumn,” she ends each stanza with the word she precisely implies in “Imbolc Chant”—each stanza shimmers with the final sun of the poem’s addressee. Finch wields her magic of music and mantra to mystically enchant: a darker wing of flower / point you like a fire. / Point your fire like a flower (“Summer Solstice Chant”). |
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