In Underdog, poet Katrina Roberts draws on wide-ranging historical and cultural sources to consider questions of identity, to ask us to meditate on how each of us is "other" - native, immigrant, sojourner, alien - and to examine our at-once shared and foreign frontiers and margins. Throughout the book, the writer's "home" becomes a palimpsest of characters erased and resurrected. In boldly inventive poems, she addresses the lives of Chinese immigrants, the appeal of African Dogon tribal lore, the heroics and defeats of artists, canine astronauts, and Mexican farm laborers, to name just a few.
Dramatic and lyrical, many poems become repositories for spells, memories, and tales. Here landscapes are faces to be studied and memorized; forgotten and overlooked legends and objects (whether quotidian, pop-cultural, ancient, or obscure), as well as characters from this planet and beyond, are retrieved and acknowledged. Other poems are concise prismatic shards, refracting and seeking specific meaning and even beauty in a world that is often both unpredictable and inscrutable. All are stitched together with unflinching compassion and a keen desire to bear witness, to comprehend something of the self's relevance in a global context.
The poems, often meticulously researched, are elaborate matrices of associations, translations, re-imaginings. Age-old mind-body questions how did we get here, these poems ask urgently, and in what ways will we carry on? What does it mean "to be" and "to belong" in times of crisis? They wonder at how individuals through the ages have handled, often with grace, tremendous injustice, and they seek to comprehend the mysteries of our perpetual migrations away from and toward each other.
Their Flight is Practically Silent
He says one thing meaning its opposite. Before water starts to run, an ache in the jaw leaves me speechless. A packet of each face has been cut out. This me, a child holding a wafer
of sky - a robin's egg. They used to say you have her eyes. wrists slashed by light, lifted to offer the world a melon, caught up hair in a twist off the shoulders, the neck, my neck - impossible and elegant - a swan's.
Such grace shocks me. Who is this? That night before the baby barn owls calling across the creek. Did he Hear them? Never to be born at all; some people would say not even a baby, not "viable."
A small sound - sizzle of bacon curling on a flat black pan, unseen. His arms re-crossed. And this vessel made of ash, this monument rising from dust? I didn't want any of it and I said so.
My favorite of her books: all the incredible precision of language and specificity of emotion of her early work, but this one enriched by the pleasures and passions of motherhood. great stuff.