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Skin

Poems

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The first collection in over a decade from a master of his craft, Skin reflects earnestly on the miraculous moments found in the daily experiences of human life.
Time and time again, Robert VanderMolen's poems illuminate the cycles of human interaction alongside the slow-moving patterns of nature: "bark just separating / after nine thousand summers." A speaker asks, "Is everything too old or too new?" and the resounding answer throughout Skin is that it's a bit of both. Colorless birds, "a deep sweep of wind," and arrowheads found in a dying red oak all point to fragmented moments that make up what it means to stitch one's life together. "Attentiveness is my best friend," a speaker remarks off-handedly, but this affair with observation is earnest and real.
Skin rewards the reader through a tacit understanding that everything in life is part of something larger that we can't see: the endless "thoughts that slide / into notice" where "in the chill of privacy / one seeks promise."
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 19, 2021
      Vandermolen (Water) offers in this finely polished 12th book an assembly of poems that are intricate and sturdy, woven with well-chosen strands of candor: “How difficult to piece one observation/ Into the next without hyperbole or minor lie.” Composed of snippets of conversation and wisps of dreams or memories, and always introspective as they document mid-Western white masculinity at late-middle age, these poems keep company primarily with the poet himself: “In the chill of privacy/ One seeks promise.” These subtle entries are selective in what they say and don’t say, the effect being at once plaintive and endearing. The poet is willing, even eager to list his shortcomings, lapses of judgement, missed moments, outright failures: “I seemed/ To be irrelevant, as harmless as a scarecrow/ Dripping straw,” or “I wish I had more discipline I wanted to tell her./ I was trying to recall an anecdote to offer,/ I was close to one, I had a wisp of it/ When the doorbell rang. Someone selling Bibles.” Vandermolen’s gift for craft and discernment counteracts his tendency toward self-depreciation. The result is a work of abundant pleasures, a testament to art as affirmation of human life.

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  • English

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