Long-awaited has become a tacky term, its soul ripped out by marketing bods
who desperately hunt a unique selling point for a poet, only to find it’s ubiquitous
and emptied of any meaning. However, there are still certain moments when it
really is valid. One such is the publication of Alan Buckley’s first full collection,
Touched (HappenStance Press, 2020).
Buckley’s work is riven from
experience, both of poetry and life. As a consequence, his verse eschews facile
certainties, setting out its stall early on in this book, in the poem Life
Lessons, which assumes the format of a Q&A:
…How do I live without being touched?
Your skin will be become stainless
steel.
How do I learn to survive in a vacuum?
Don’t move. Don’t breathe. Don’t feel.
Of course, this poem’s significance is
also signposted by its reference to the collection’s title. Moreover, its human
questions, which are met by inhuman replies, implicitly encourage the
protagonist and the reader to explore far more human routes. As such, these
lines represent a statement of intent, the poet setting out on his quest.
In technical terms, meanwhile, what’s
left unsaid is far more important than what’s actually stated. This requires a linguistic
and thematic lightness of touch that in turn demands maturity. In other words,
Buckley has left behind any need to prove himself via fireworks. Instead, he’s
inviting us to accompany him on a journey of self-discovery through these
poems, enabling us to reflect on our own lives in the process.
As mentioned above, the disappearance
of certainty is pivotal to an understanding of Touched. Nuancing is
present in each and every poem in the collection, and is often represented by
the invocation of two key words: maybe and might. Here are
several examples…
…Maybe, with patience,
both might be altered in some small
way.
Or maybe we can’t be anything better
than this…
(from Clocks)
“Maybe this is like that booth —
I’m Harry Dean Stanton and
you’re Nastassja Kinski….
…Or maybe I’m Natassja…
(from Confessional)
…Later, they might dress,
walk out for coffee at some café
down the road; or maybe not.
(from All That Matters)
“…Ordinary stuff, as if the years
to come were blank pages in a journal
that we might fill however we wanted…”
(from Things Can Only Get Better)
“…We part. I cycle down Cowley Road,
mindful
of the oncoming buses as they swing
out
to avoid the parked cars. It’s a
glorious
July afternoon. Anything might happen.”
(from Cowley Road, 3.30 p.m.)
The last quote takes on added
importance, as the action of the poem in question unfurls alongside the news of
terrorist attacks in London. Buckley is unflinchingly portraying the best and worst
of life, showing us how closely the two counterpoints co-exist, coming to the
realisation that maturity and self-acceptance require our reconciliation with
this fact.
Touched
is a deeply moving collection, coherent and courageous in its poetic aesthetics
and its attitude to human experience. Certainties are stripped of their facile
attraction, while nuance is embraced throughout. Recommended!
Lovely book!
ReplyDeleteTerrific book. So gl;ad you like it as well.
ReplyDelete