If I liked Maria Taylor’s first
full collection, Melanchrini (Nine
Arches Press, 2012), I love her new pamphlet, Instructions for making me (HappenStance Press, 2016). She has somehow made the almost impossible
leap from being a very good poet to being an outstanding one. The question is how.
At first sight, Maria Taylor’s
verse can seem disconcertingly heterogeneous. In fact, even the blurb on the
back cover to this pamphlet states “There’s no telling what she’ll do from one
poem to the next, which is one of the things that makes reading her such a
pleasure”. Of course, the potential drawback is we might also consequently
struggle to come to identify Taylor’s work. Even in the space of the seventeen
poems that make up the chapbook, she employs numerous different forms and deals
with all sorts of thematic concerns. And yet, somehow, it all hangs together. These
days, I immediately recognise a Maria Taylor poem when I encounter one in a
journal, long before spotting her name at the bottom.
So what is the specific aspect
that Taylor has most developed since Melanchrini?
What element makes her poetry different? Well, it was already present and discernible
in certain poems from her full collection, but it’s becoming her defining
quality and shines throughout this pamphlet: I’m referring to her knack for
out-of-body experiences. It’s now more surefooted and powerful than in the past,
as in the following example from “Hypothetical”:
“A friend of mine asks if I’d
sleep with Daniel Craig.
Before I have time to answer, I’m
in bed with Daniel Craig…”
... and from “The Invisible Man”…
“My daughter pushes
The invisible man on a swing
under the apple tree.
I’ve know him for years.
I recognise him by the dust
motes.
I ask him out. He stood me up…”
and from “My Stranger”…
…He’s the only stranger I can
afford,
a middle-aged man in a plaid
shirt
smiling for an artist. Nothing to
me,
but I still hang him in the
hallway
and call him “Dad”…”
Taylor’s primary underlying technique
and concern is the nature of self, the blending of identities, the interweaving
of voices, the merging of fact and fiction through ever-shifting perspectives,
never allowing the reader to rest on solid ground. The result is verse that’s
laden with highly specific intensity and insight, all this in language that
flows naturally and never seems forced. Sentences, expressions and line-ending
are inevitable yet surprising.
Pamphlets between collections are
often under-reviewed and under-read. Maria Taylor’s Instructions for making me deserves an opposite fate. It’s a
pivotal landmark in her development, our chance to encounter a set of poems
that have her unique stamp running through them. They show us a poet who’s
hitting her stride and reaching maturity. Her second full collection will be a
mouth-watering prospect, but in the meantime we have these delicious morsels to
relish.
Dear Matthew
ReplyDeleteI must confess that I had never heard of her but I will keep an eyeball peeled for her work in future.
Best wishes from Simon R Gladdish