One of the best books I've read in a long time, Lean Against This Late Hour reminded me at times of some of my old favorite poets like Yehuda Amichai and Vasko Popa, in its accessibility, its burning lucidity, its skeletal concision, its youthful passion, its overflowing emotion, its intelligence, its originality, its necessariness and its timeless relevance in how it confronts the fallout of war. The metaphors are at once down-to-earth and exhilaratingly otherworldly, metaphors like:
the oranges of life are blood oranges
and
perhaps a day
in my seventies I'll be born
and feel that death
is a shirt we all come to put on,
whose buttons we can either fasten
or leave undone...
I like how Abdolmalekian goes that extra step to make his metaphors feel not like fleeting verbal constructions, but something really concrete and tangible, something that can be later stepped on and built on:
the curved posture of my father
who after years
has yet to take my brother's corpse
off his shoulders
and place him in the ground
You can sense the poet's deep intelligence in the nuanced way he writes about the subtly varied interactions that can occur between light and dark, for example:
We stepped into a room,
lit the candles
but nothing in the room was lit.
The glow conceals the unlit...
and, in a later poem,
The sun won't conform to the dark
His intelligence also shines through in the simultaneous complexity and clarity of some of his truly unique metaphors:
In me there are characters
who melt in the snow
who drift with the rivers
and years later
rain into me
In one poem he names Lorca as an inspiration, a predecessor, and you're like of course:
I think the bullet shot toward you
was a glass of water
poured on a forest in flames
My favorite poems were "Pattern," "Long Poem of Loneliness" (one of the best poems I've ever read about a father), "Doubts and a Hesitation," "Poem for Stillness" (about a soldier's PTSD), "Necklace," "Long Exposure," "Paper Boat" (a contender for the best poem ever to use Noah's Ark as a metaphor), "On Power Lines," "Forest," "Long Exposure VI," and "Bricks."