What is a body of land, as in, a land seen and felt like it inhabited your body. Like the land was a myth. But it’s not a myth. And your body cannot be inhabited by land. Maybe this feels a little obscure, and I might register it as the difficulty of Foerster’s book. The imagistic language she uses to understand the land, and the history of the land, and what it means that she fits in that history, both in the historic fact of the genocide directed to her people and in the present fact that she inhabits this land. How The Maybe-Bird reckons with all these premises in a series of tight lyric poems is disorienting.
Or rather, the poems feel disoriented. In that way where the poet keeps trying to hold some ground, but then that ground slips out from under her. And what it felt like she was describing, she is still describing, but there’s something else getting described, too. And how is she going to attend to both of these at once? It’s disorienting.
And I would argue it’s built into the book’s design. Is it possible to articulate a land inhabiting you? Is there language that can occupy the body sufficiently so that it sufficiently expresses this tie to the land? And is a book like this mainly about the land? Or is it about language? Is it about the relationship between language and a mythical forest, and how the actual land invigorates the myth while also complicating it? In the book’s notes, Foerster indicates the book’s construction is modeled after a “net.” Which, in practice, involves an interlocking set of lines repeating at set intervals.
And maybe this careful pattern lends an irony to the book’s disorientation. Or its slippery descriptions of scene. Yes, the poems are layered. Yes, the layers have that sifting quality to them where one image kind of fades into the next. But the poetic line that might signal the shift to a new observation is often feels familiar to the reader. It’s been the title of a previous poem. Or it was a line that had appeared earlier, in a particularly meaningful space. The book has that free lyric submersion effect where one image washes into the next, or sifts down to the next. But the language accomplishing these transitions are repeated lines. An effect that is exciting to read, and aware of its accomplishment as the book builds these repeated lines into a familiar fabric for the reader, but is still committed to the poetic moment.