Untitled Country Review (ISSN 2152-7903), published quarterly during 2010-2013, features poetry, book reviews, photography, and short works of non-fiction. Thank you for visiting.


Showing posts with label Editor's Intros. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Editor's Intros. Show all posts

Final Issue - Fall-Winter 2012/2013



Thank You

This is the final issue of Untitled Country Review. We are putting the project to bed now, for the same reason that we started it; because, in the words of Mary Oliver:

"…the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
it calls out to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting—
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.”

Thank you for reading.

-SS


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Contents

Review
Vivian Faith Prescott reviews Navigation, by Brittney Corrigan

Poems
Ruth Bavetta – “West of Reno”
Barbara March – “Liquidation Before Winter”
W.F. Lantry – “California”
Connie Post – “Long Haul”
Nancy Carol Moody – “Merwin On Thyme”
Ellen Roberts Young – “Atomic Power”
Lucia Galloway – “Remembering the Carousel Rooster: Epistle #4”
Frederick Pollack – “Target Acquired”



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Review

Brittney Corrigan. 2012. Navigation. 103 pages. Portland, OR: The Habit of Rainy Nights Press.
ISBN #978-0-9746683-6-9
Reviewed by Vivian Faith Prescott

“We are left in this hemisphere/tilted toward the sky/holding our bodies with both hands/both hands reaching—” Brittney Corrigan’s poetry collection Navigation is a cartography of internal and external landscapes; ancestors with stars behind their eyes, a silver mixing bowl at a mother’s brown feet, tumbleweed in the backyard, a place where birds leave in winter.

The collection is separated by four sections: “Mapmakers,” “Sighting the Land,” “Uncharted Worlds,” and “Journeys and Returns.” The poems are written in a variety of forms from couplets to prose poems and poems such as “Wind River,” whose shape, as if following the curve of earth and sky, moves with the words on the page.

Navigation routes the reader through the first section of “Mapmakers” with poems that consider how people make us who we are. About a grandmother, the speaker says, “She grew to make our syllables/like sucking on cloves…”  And in poems moved by grief and illness: “…in your own private/earthquake…” and “…each touch a small ghost/walking through walls…”

In the section “Sighting the Land,” the poems slip into the landscape with images of loons and thunderstorms, lighthouses, nests, and islands. In “Uncharted Worlds,” the speaker marvels at the joy and wonder and grief of motherhood: “she caught this week's full moon to keep inside/of her until it warms to shining,” along with the heartache and passion in loving an autistic child: “that’s not how/we started is it, little one?” 

In ‘Journeys and Returns’ the poems return to a sense of home again, but not in the sense that all is right with the world, but with “how the center of things/surprise us.” Indeed, the poems in Navigation are centered, yet surprising and sometimes aching, conveying longing and wonder, like bright objects fixed on a star chart ready to be explored.


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West of Reno

1
Driving up old Gold Lake Road
we dodged lumber trucks
careening unpaved curves at heedless speed.
Sometimes they carried but a single log,
one arboreal body so huge
it could not share its coffin,

a trunk that had survived winter storms,
August thirst, September fire,
only to have its majesty laid out,
carried in a breakneck funeral procession
to the lumber mill at Sattley.

Whatever we can learn
from the now-abandoned mill,
the rusted cone which once burned
the dust of trees like these, is offset
by our tendency to prefer roads clear
and paved, wherever they may lead.

2
Last year we drove to Johnsville, set up
the telescope, stared at whirling galaxies
where no point is fixed,
where stars roam untethered
by charts and expectations.

Something forces us to search
for what attaches us to earth,
to the keening needles of the pines,
water-eaten cliffs abandoned
by hydraulic miners, sound
distilled to tumbled fragments.

We cling to tender surfaces,
the ever-present wind against us.
Riffles cross the lake
broken, mended, broken.

--Ruth Bavetta

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Liquidation Before Winter

her arms folded, a sideways tightening
outside gold leaves free-

fall onward

to liquidation, no
we call it a retirement sale

for change is rich

in its measure of gold,
ounces of fullness written on

a cashier's check once a week,

until the store and her breath
are bare to the walls

--Barbara March


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California

Streetlights outshine the moon, and all is well:
eucalyptus weave the western wind
but the small rain lingers in its clouds.
She reclines within, a silken form
investigating Heidegger and Kant
for which I have no patience.

                                                 I'm outside
harvesting the last fruits of fall
and clipping cattleyas, which bloom at night
like moonflowers or jasmine: what's it to her,   
whose thought is deeper than habitual?
I'm musing on the harvest or the moon
which, like a rose in wreaths of cumulus,
comes rising from the deserts of the east.

I bear the fruit and flowers to the house:
disturbed, she rises and throws on a dress,
strolls out past bougainvillea, trumpet vines
and ferns I mixed to please her wanton eye,
to her Mercedes Benz: Vivaldi roams
through all the seasons as she drives away

without a word of explanation or
even a glance to say she noticed these
strange birds and blossoms I have gathered here.
Macaws scream overhead, monk parakeets
pillage the avocado, but I close
the front door as the empty rain comes on.

--W.F. Lantry

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Long Haul

When your sleep
is the heaviest thing
you’ve carried all day
you must remember
how to position it
how to tuck it under your chin

When everything is lost
in the gravity of dark
you must act normal
when the doorman offers
to help carry your bags

When large sacks of insomnia
balance
like groceries on your hip
you must learn
where the benches are,
how to settle in
between old ladies
and homeless men
who rest with the pigeons
until dusk

you must step over
the sand man who is now
a war veteran, holding a tin cup

you must find places
to set the dark down
before the bag breaks,

before your nocturne
is scattered across a wide street

and you are left
on your muddied knees,
with no way to sort through
the dark figs, split oranges
rolling down a side alley
where you once prayed

--Connie Post


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Merwin on Thyme
            
At this altitude
four hundred feet
it will not grow
not even
in this pot I have
chosen for it

though
further up the mountainside
eight hundred feet
one can see the thyme
such an intricate weaver
of itself
as it steals through
every crag and sinew
the plumes
of its breath rising

no one
not herbalist
nor horticulturist
can explain it

in this advancing hour
one more question

without answer

--Nancy Carol Moody


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Atomic Power

Curanderas have no use for smallest particles,
know plants’ properties vary by the earth,

water, wind in which they grow.  Chemists
diagram atoms linked in hexagons,

isolating compounds from plants that heal,
won’t replicate environments.  It’s enough

to synthesize the complex molecule,
as if its host were irrelevant, as if bodies

were only stacks of atoms, not
columns of energy in constant interplay.

--Ellen Roberts Young


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Remembering the Carousel Rooster:
Epistle to the Despondent Urbanites, #4


Salutations from one who remembers the carousel rooster in Tilden Park circling in jocund docility.  From one who knows not whether that fellow, when the late afternoon fog touched in from San Francisco Bay, noticed the medicinal tang of eucalyptus or thought about hens.  Blessings from one who thought (as well one might) that an egg mobile was something bright and existential above an infant’s crib.  Learned since that privileged hens now travel in wheeled cages, rolled each day to a new spot where they waddle down their little ramps onto new plots of grass (my thanks for this to Michael Pollan).  They peck for new grubs to give their eggs that robust golden yolk.  (Did Mr. Pollan ever meet the carousel rooster—that jolly dinosaur?)  Earthlings all, some of us have known backyard roosters marshaling hens in their enclosures, giving their wake-up calls.  Are we blessed that roosters thrive in their estate?

                        Ruffling loud feathers
                        letting loose muscled vowels
                        he says nothing at all

--Lucia Galloway


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Target Acquired

Remember how, during the Gulf War,
General Schwarzkopf displayed
to an appreciative press corps
“the luckiest guy in Baghdad” –
a driver exiting
a bridge the instant before
a missile hit it?

So many years without élan,
without victory –
I can almost creep out
on the pedestrian walkway,
dust off my jacket, cross. 
But this city
is neither poor, dry,
terrorized, ugly, nor armed. 
Windowboxes and fountains flourish.
Bikes lean against walls.
The statues in the parks have gone
beyond even poets.  Sheets
are white, diagnostic machinery
gleams in the clinics.

It is the city of defeat.

Which is why no one’s here –
I don’t love them, no one loves it.

Thus at least the distant
watchers watching me believe.
It’s fall.  The raptor high above
will fire soon an air-to-ground.
I sit beneath a tree,
its leaves as dense and red
as petals of a generous rose.

--Frederick Pollack





Issue 7 - Welcome


 J. Robert Oppenheimer Sculpture,
Los Alamos, NM

Welcome

Here is the 2012 Spring-Summer issue of Untitled Country Review. This issue features work from writers living in, or hailing from and writing about, the Desert Southwest. It also contains work from those living outside the region, including writers from the San Francisco Bay Area, the Pacific Northwest, Florida, and elsewhere. 


We will begin reading work for the Fall-Winter issue ("California") May 1st. Please check the Submissions page for details. 


Thanks for reading, and enjoy!



--Scot Siegel, Editor


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Issue 6: Welcome


by Scot Siegel



                                                                                October 14, 2011

When is a poem not a nature poem?
--by Scot Siegel

A reader wrote to me recently with a complaint. Our first! Her note was brief and went like this: “Why do you publish so many poems by [x]? [He/She] is not a nature poet like others in your journal.”

Fair question. Though I had to ask: When is a poem not a nature poem? The writers here come from all walks of life and hail from different parts of the world. Some live in large urban centers, while others are located in rural communities. They write from prairie, city, coast, suburb, desert, military base, and forest, among other locales.

When is a poet a nature poet? Nature is natural only because we say so. Nature becomes a resource when we put it to economic use. But nature resists our efforts to control it; it shapes us as much as we shape it. Our lives reflect our engagement with, or our turning away from, nature: Sun, Oak, Wind, Snow influence our writing even as we are thinking of skyscraper, wheelbarrow, asphalt, eraser. So when is a poet not a nature poet?

I am glad this journal prompts questioning and feedback. If this topic piques your interest, please consider submitting a guest essay when we reopen for submissions in November. We have a new features section called “One-Acts,” which is open to short pieces of literary criticism (e.g., one-poem reviews) and creative non-fiction. Our first One-Act follows this letter.

Thank you for reading, and welcome to the 2011-2012 Fall-Winter Issue of Untitled Country Review.

Warmly,
Scot Siegel

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Issue 5: Welcome




Welcome to the Spring-Summer Issue of Untitled Country Review. Starting with this issue we are on a semiannual publication schedule. That means twice per year. The intent is to feature more poems accompanied by art in each issue, and more visual art (photography, paintings, graphic design, etc.) in general.

Please see the updated Submission Guidelines.

Annual Report
Thank you for making the journal a success over the past year. Now here are the important stats. Please note, these are not “bullets”; they are onyx marbles:
  • We have approximately 300-400 loyal readers, i.e., those who look at more than the table of contents in each issue.
  • We have consistently published between 6-12 poets and one or two features/reviews per issue.
  • Our contributors include a state Poet Laureate, a winner of the National Book Award, a first-time-in-print teenage author, people who work with their hands, people who teach, and people who have given up conventional work to write full-time.
  • The journal continues to be available worldwide for free.
  • Our balance sheet shows that we have no assets and no liabilities. Our balance sheet lies! We are indebted to all of our contributors, including those who submitted work but whose work was not selected during the past year. 
You have made my job difficult and I am grateful for that. You have made Untitled Country Review a vibrant poetry “marketplace,” an important part of the Gift Economy.

Welcome to the Spring-Summer 2011 Issue of Untitled Country Review!

With Gratitude,

Scot


Scot Siegel, Editor



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Issue 4 - Welcome





Winter

One must have a mind of winter
For the listener, who listens in the snow,
And, nothing himself, beholds
Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.

            - Wallace Stevens, “The Snow Man” (Harmonium, 1923)


Some things in the world have not already happened. That’s what Stevens refers to as “the nothing that is.” Think women in burqas who have nothing to hide. Think gays and lesbians, as children, dreaming of flying F-16’s. Think bisexual Marines, and transgender people registering to become adoptive parents. Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell is history. But tell that to the women of Egypt, Bahrain, and Iran. They would like to take a stand now. Who is in the square? All of Egypt is in the square. The square is a window. It is a porous window. Little bits of heaven break off in the windstorm and shower us every winter. Doves are tweeting through the blizzard. We hear them through the glass ceiling…

Welcome to the Winter 2011 Issue of Untitled Country Review!

Scot

Scot Siegel, Editor



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Issue 3: Welcome




Ah, Autumn…




After forty-seven days of no rain, “the backyard is singing, because/ it is raining.”
Two-day rain “makes eyelashes and shoulders, elbows, hamstrings, nipples, toes and tongues…” Rain kisses “Kayakers barrel[ing] through rapids” and ushers salmon up falls to spawn and die and become rain again. Rain is present in “the dark steam of each day lifting/ from the flat table of tar.” Rain in eyes of “rivet and handle.” Rain in the runaway girl with “a porous childhood.” Georgia rain. Oregon rain. Harlem rain. Even in the absence of rain – Nevada and Kandahar dust – we are in the presence of rain. The “man in a rowboat/ before there were roads…” That’s the kind of rain I’m talking about…

Why the obsession with rain? One of my earliest memories of autumn is riding on my dad’s shoulders in the rain as he'd sing: Raindrops keep falling on my head… Dah-dah-dadadada-dah-dat-dat-dada-dat! So, dad, this one's for you...

Welcome to the Fall 2010 issue of Untitled Country Review!

Scot

Scot Siegel, Editor



Table of Contents                        Onward!











Welcome, no boarding pass required

The greatest ownership of all is to glance around and understand.
                                                                        – William Stafford


Welcome to the inaugural issue of Untitled Country Review. The response to our first call for submissions was outstanding. We received over two hundred poems from the United States, Canada and the UK. Thanks to all who submitted their work!

Issue 1 contains new poetry from award-winning authors, emerging poets, and one writer for whom this is his first publication. I am also pleased to present a review of Catherine Kasper’s brilliant book, NOTES from the COMMITTEE (Noemi Press, 2009). 

The poems in this inaugural issue, both individually and collectively, embody the vision that I have for the journal -- an untitled country where "ownership" is as simple as looking around and seeing the world in a new light.  

All the best,

Scot


Scot Siegel, Editor



Issue 2



Come on in. The water’s fine…

“The ideal poem is enjoyable to read aloud. It has elements of light and dark, and it reveals some truth greater than the sum of its parts. The ideal poem takes us into some uncharted territory and reveals the world we think we know in a new light.”
                        - UCR Interview with Duotrope, July 12, 2010


I am pleased to present the second issue of Untitled Country Review. Our summer collection examines more uncharted territory. Here, we find David Chorlton glimpsing through desert fences lightning drawing maps on the sky. Here, we meet J.P. Dancing Bear in the warmth of a den of foxes and watch “dawn coming through the open arms of trees." 

And it's not all about nature, friends. Turn these pages and discover Paul Watsky leaning on a gate at a Giants’ game, the hometown team in a slump, but there's jazz on the streets of San Francisco!  And, here, we find bluegrass and country, summer swimming holes and covered wagons. We have love and death and reservation drums; discrimination and salvation. Here we find Little Red Riding Hood, ancient sacred texts, Aerosmith’s "Sweet Emotion," and a fertility goddess… 

And much more… So come on in, enjoy the summer fun!

Scot

Scot Siegel, Editor




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