The Art of Stone Axes - Don Thompson - Books - Broadstone Books - 9781937968816 - May 1, 2021
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The Art of Stone Axes

Don Thompson

The Art of Stone Axes

Poetry. California Interest. The name of Don Thompson's new collection of quatrains derives from a quote by Randall Jarrell, describing a poet as a maker of stone axes and asking, why make them now? The answer to Jarrell's question may be found here. In the title poem, the one stand-alone quatrain in the book, Thomson observes, You can chip the stone into shape, / Approximately, but not much more. / All the skill's in binding it to the handle-- / The tight wrap, the unimaginable knots. It's an apt metaphor for poetry, the words always at best approximate, the skill coming in how the poet binds them into form, shaped to use. Thompson's knots are skillfully tied, and he demonstrates, elegantly and eloquently, that a form as traditional as a quatrain sequence can perfectly express contemporary themes. Indeed, the brevity and concision of such short poems seems to have anticipated our age of tweets and texts and soundbites. Take, for instance, the poem Harvest from a sequence describing an abandoned farm labor camp: Migrant ghosts still come here for a season. / Too busy to haunt, they're out in the fields / All night, harvesting loneliness-- / The one cash crop that never fails. In these brief words, Thompson not only captures the desolate feeling of a place, but references the hardship of migrant field work, of our unresolved national struggles with immigration, with economic equity, with labor and dignity. And aren't we all harvesting loneliness in this age of pandemic?In four lines, Thompson can contain worlds. His sequences range over topics as diverse as sheep grazing in a winter pasture to poems in honor of Sir Philip Sydney, but most of all the quiet wisdom of nature. His closing poem, tellingly titled Not the End offers this scene of life going on beneath our notice: Autumn's anthem: bees / humming in the Chinese elms. / When there's no more honey to make, / They make music. Why make poems, and especially short poems, these stone axes, seeming relics of another age? Because, like the bees, they make music.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released May 1, 2021
ISBN13 9781937968816
Publishers Broadstone Books
Pages 64
Dimensions 155 × 234 × 5 mm   ·   90 g
Language English  

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