In her debut collection True Mistakes, the poet Lena Moses-Schmitt unleashes her powers of scrutiny on herself and on works of art to interrogate the essential nature of consciousness, identity, and time.
As the poet goes about daily life—taking long walks, painting at her desk, going to work, grappling with the deaths of friends, struggling with anxiety and depression—she ruminates on the boundaries between art and reality, grief and joy, living and imagining. For Moses-Schmitt, thought, like painting, is relentlessly “I often think about things so hard / I kill them.” “Is it possible to paint myself so precisely / I disappear? Can I remember myself / so completely I’m erased?” In the context of such ruminations, the poet’s reflections on David Hockney’s seminal pool paintings shimmer with sublimity and insight.
Working to turn “mistakes”—misperceptions, errors in life and in art—into sites of possibility and imagination instead of failure or confusion, Moses-Schmitt offers “a truth for every reader,” writes series editor Patricia Smith.
A collection of poems about death. She, Lena Moses-Schmitt, is here to know, and certainly, writing any collection of poems is praiseworthy, as it requires revealing oneself beyond what is comfortable. However, these poems lack a grounded sense of place from which the feelings that she has undoubtably experienced (grief, longing, sadness) can be expressed. She possesses the type of unfocused sentimentality that turns the thoughts into images, but those images do not encompass the intent behind the words. The poems are long, to their detriment, and do not represent the truth that I see in the here and there in lines which do express her emotions and would have been better left alone to represent her poem. The filler is as if she went through a poetic handbook and plucked a concept to inject into a given line and round out the work. These piecewise attempts at writing remind me of graduate school efforts. The poems lack an essential truth of the moment which brought forth the initial emotion. Though they wish to portray that initial emotion, they do not. The truth of her life is obliquely stated, and to find it, you must sift through the poetic concepts that cobble together each poem. The collection would have been greatly helped by restricting the words allowed and focusing on concrete images as a base for the juxtaposition between the real and the emotion.