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Amy King's first full-length collection, Antidotes for an Alibi, insists that we examine the deceptive clarity of our actions and the goals that motivate us. How does one actually get from "A" to "B"-and is there ever really a "B"? What color is the white space between "A" and "B"? Upon closer inspection, surface realities reveal themselves to be porous and fragile, layered with textures and grains that lead the eye on varying pathways. So what are we to do in a world of newspaper narratives that instruct us toward tidy endings, murmuring that such endings are possible and even inevitable?
These poems greet us with leaking giraffes, dogs that lick lye, the Lone Ranger, the inhabitants of Dishwater Island, an unmarried wife and a Sikh cab driver, all acting within a familiar environment of telephone messages, factory work, walks through woods, red robins and hummingbirds, war zones and American histories. Both the characters and their shifting frameworks combine and overlap to point out the strangeness we tend to overlook for clarity's sake. King wants us to reconsider the possibilities of current events, to see that Truth is no longer a series of fixed notations in black and white, but is a shape-shifting, multi-faceted chain of perspectives. Her poetry celebrates the multiplicities that sing within the surface of every object and action; she aims at delectable surges, so that readers may touch and revel in the uncertainties of a complex world in motion.
I admire Amy King's poetry tremendously for the way it manipulates apparently plain language into thoughtful audacities. But her work is never in love with its own spiky cleverness. Quite the opposite: it is marked, even at its most pointed or witty, by an austere refusal to giggle at its own surprises. I first came to understand King's poetry, quite appropriately, by the accident of seeing what the British call "English mosaic" on a lamppost at the northeast corner of Eighth Street and Broadway in Manhattan. "English mosaic" is what happens when someone willfully creative takes pieces of porcelain, china, earthenware ? ordinary, rare, or irreplaceable ? smashes them (that violence being essential to rebirth) and forces the pretty shards into new relations to one another. That lamppost seems the perfect tangible representation of King's work, which takes up the tactile and moral world we perceive, holds it tenderly for a moment in a cherishing embrace ? the better to dash it against a hard surface and rearrange the new fragments in strange, indelible ways. Reading King's poems makes the eyes smart in every sense of the phrase: readers are compelled to see as possible juxtapositions they never would have envisioned on their own. "English mosaic" also describes the cool fun King has with plain nickel words, artfully reshuffled. Hers is not a surrealist's art ? she does not embrace chaos ? but she does want to make readers feel that the comfortable rug and chairs they sit on have somehow grown ambulatory and are threatening to walk outside into the yard to sniff the air. Nothing is quite safe; nothing remains the same ? deliciously so.
-Michael Steinman has written and edited six books, including The Happiness of Getting It Down Right and The Element of Lavishness, which was selected as a NYT Notable Book in 2001.
Amy King grew up in Georgia and now spends much of her time in Brooklyn and Baltimore. She teaches English at Nassau Community College on Long Island, and her first collection, Antidotes for an Alibi, is available through Blazevox [books].
Wind Chimes and more... You can show your poem to your mom, your spouse,... Read More BoyhoodOh me! Thy glorious days have flown! I mealy noticed,... Read More In the midst of darkness, there is light. In... Read More Key Largo:The fans turn lazily in front of the doorThey... Read More She probably can't remember and I know I can never... Read More Supernatural PoetryHere are five poems,-what I call-death and supernatural poems.... Read More Little girl from HuancayoDo you really, really know? Just how... Read More I Shall Wait..On all the new mornings, and every singking... Read More English VersionAnd the Death God said: "Let it rise to... Read More Real Power.One Tsunami, and all our armies, Seem belittled by... Read More Cesar Vallejo: Black RosesBow down your head ol' poet- To... Read More Charlotte Bronte (1816 ?1855) Novelist and Poet.Charlotte was the daughter... Read More Frog SummerSummer grows hot, for the New-blooded frogs; The bugs... Read More It was not me as I am now. It was... Read More Phantom of the Rocks[Huancayo, Peru]Night falls deepUpon the traveler!Low, over... Read More Ocean Heal MeOcean heal my wounds Let your waves curl... Read More Time goes by to quickly to hold your feelings inside... Read More Happy, Sad, Mad and Glad, Moved in down the streetCautious... Read More Daybreak at Pikes Creek [Summer of 2005]Daybreak by Lake Superior... Read More Footprints to Mantaro Valley (English version)In what retreat art hid?-Where... Read More I never thought I would have to say GOODBYE to... Read More YOU MIGHT THINK I AM STRONGI THINK YOU GOT IT... Read More Growing hurts sometimes; saying goodbye to friends, ... Read More Sorry would be a start.Though you cant take back your... Read More the disease of extremism is infectious-; whoever cannot think of... Read More
Windchimes
for great gifts!
The Art of Receiving Poetic Critique
Two Poems: Boyhood, and Old Age [with a note on style]
In The Midst Of All
Key Largo - Frater Albertus
My Final Defeat - Fixed Competition
Death & the Supernatural: Poetry/Five Poems
Little Girl from Huancayo [a poem/in English and Spanish]
I Shall Wait...
The Dead God of Copan (in English and Spanish)
Tsunami -a Poem Dedicated To Help Aid and Awareness and Encourage Future Harmony. Make Peace Not War
Ceasar Vallejo: Black Roses [In English and Spanish]
Biography of Charlotte Bronte
Three Poems: Liberty, Death, and a Frog [with Commentary on Liberty]
It Was Not Me
Three Poems: Phantom of the Rocks; Lady from Lima & Bell Ringer of de Copan
Ocean Heal Me
Lifes Too Short
Welcome to the Town of Feeling
Daybreak at Pikes Creek [a Poem]
Footprints to Mantaro Valley (a poem in Spanish and English)
My Grannio
Caught in the Arms of ED
Growing
The Man Who Could Not Say Sorry For His Sins
Infected Ideologies [a Poetic Portrait]
The Incubus' Flash-lightHe looked inside my head And found a... Read More
Advance: in Mr. Siluk's poetry one finds symbolist values, sensuous... Read More
No one should have to beg or crawl before humanity.... Read More
Dedícate to Antonio Castillo. L. Of. Los Andes UniversitarioOde to:The... Read More
1.Evil's CreationThou knowith evil clings To tender peace-; Nor does... Read More
Footprints to Mantaro Valley (Peru; in English and Spanish)In what... Read More
How I wonder what he's doing as I sit alone... Read More
1.Night in Jamaica [Peruvianism: 1810]It was a rainy night... Read More
Hammers. Timbers. Iron. Steel.They're laying down a mighty keel.As ant-like... Read More
What's a prisoner to do when justice fails and... Read More
Little girl from HuancayoDo you really, really know? Just how... Read More
FIND the MAGICFind the Magic As you release old bondage... Read More
In the midst of darkness, there is light. In... Read More
Have you ever experienced infatuation with someone you know is... Read More
Like a cat I slumber, blissfully unencumbered, Through eighty per... Read More
Azra, Azra, Wake up Azra. Wake up Azra, It is... Read More
Since my wife and I are moving, or preparing to... Read More
She probably can't remember and I know I can never... Read More
Fair Andes! Thy arms reach highOf iron-woven solid stone Thu... Read More
Have you ever thought about how nice it would be... Read More
Most of my poems are written late at night, often,... Read More
Amy King Antidotes for an Alibi BlazeVox Books ISBN 0-9759227-5-0... Read More
YOU MIGHT THINK I AM STRONGI THINK YOU GOT IT... Read More
I get up in the morningAnd want to stay in... Read More
Way of Life: Rhymes of the IncaPizarro (Spanish conquistador ((1525))The... Read More
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