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Suspension

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Suspension is that rare book of poetry, as much a narrative as a collection of individually successful lyrics. We follow here the extraordinary events of a life and the visions of the one/the many living it. We end, as in life, so far from where we began that a true sense of progress is made in the reading of this poetry, and yet we’ve lingered, meditated, listened, because this is work made mostly of imagery and music, subtlety and unflinching consideration. These are poems to return to again and again, written by a poet of unique powers.   —Laura Kasischke

 

Kindle Edition

Published August 28, 2018

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Paige Riehl

3 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Nina.
Author 15 books82 followers
January 5, 2019
Review in current issue of The Broadkill Review:

lthough Suspension is Paige Riehl’s debut collection, she is an accomplished, award-winning poet. Jude Nutter and Oliver de la Paz selected Riehl as winner of the 2012-2013 Loft Mentor Series in Poetry in Minneapolis. Riehl also won the 2011 Literal Latte Prize for Poetry and was a semi-finalist for the 2011 Pablo Neruda Prize for Poetry and the 2011 River Styx International Poetry Contest.

A suspension is a temporary stoppage. According to an online thesaurus, the top synonym for suspension is pause. Other synonyms of suspension are adjournment, interruption, postponement, delay, and deferral. The Cambridge dictionary defines suspension as the act of stopping something happening. All of these are pertinent to Riehl’s collection. Some prevalent themes are infertility, which can certainly be a postponement or deferral of dreams, an interruption of assumptions about how one’s life will proceed.
There’s the pregnancy that didn’t last,
didn’t stick,
the lost baby, as if
we’d set him aside,
a forgotten package on a train.
(Considering the Options)

There are poems about international adoption, where the idea of suspension grows ever larger-the suspension of privacy as a couple fills out paper after paper, the delay during the wait for a child to be available. I see the word and visualize small particles suspended in a liquid, then slowly sinking and settling on the bottom. Isn’t that a terrific metaphor for international adoption? The assimilation of a child into a new family, a new language and culture, a new country, while at the same time attempting to honor and preserve the child’s heritage.
At home, we create our daughter’s history
and worry about her future. Worry her homeland loss.
(Near Chang Mai, Thailand)

Time plays a large role in these poems. The passage of time as family members age, the suspension of time during the application and wait for an international adoption, and even the sense of time standing still while snorkeling over a coral reef, where “the guard warns us not to touch/ the fragile coral, urges restraint.” Further on in this poem is the line “Float carefully in this liminal space.” Could this be another metaphor for pregnancy, especiall y in a woman whose previous pregnancy did not result in a living baby? Or a couple dreaming of a baby being born in a foreign country, a baby that will one day be theirs? And of course, the feeling of suspension as “I float with the current.” This poem, in so many ways, captures the essence of Riehl’s collection. Snorkeling over a coral reef is beautiful, almost mystical, yet filled with potentional danger, both for the reef and to the snorkeler. It’s scary and exhilarating.
This must be what it’s like, the moment right before
what could, what might be,
(Restraint)

The book is divided into five numbered sections, with the title poem as a stand-alone, four pages, Section III. Reihl makes effective use of anaphor in this poem; several stanzas begin with the phrase “Here is what lies between us.” This phrase refers to the distance, both geographical and emotional, between the speaker and her to-be-adopted daughter. It concludes:
Here is what really lies between just us,
between our empty arms, our open hearts:
only now, only this waiting.

Riehl’s poems are serious, thoughtful, questioning, sometimes dark, but they lean toward love as the ultimate resolution.
Profile Image for Kory Wells.
5 reviews10 followers
July 22, 2022
Poetry that illuminates the inevitable waiting in our lives

Whether a moment is desired or dreaded, we all know what it is to wait for what comes next. In this fine collection of poetry, Paige Riehl reminds us that none of us live in a “house built of certainty.” Yet in looking straight-on at fear, grief, second-guessing, and joy, she offers a hopeful, satisfying read. Centered on love, family, adoption, illness, travel, and other topics, SUSPENSION eloquently examines life in the spaces where we linger, whether we’re at the mercy of the universe, a bureaucracy, an indifferent nurse, or a line at Disneyworld. Readers both new to and experienced with contemporary poetry are sure to relate to, and admire, these well-wrought poems.
Profile Image for Luanne.
441 reviews
April 25, 2019
Loved the book.
Enjoyed the discussion of the book at my book club.
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