Amazon.com Review
When her first collection,
Ants on the Melon, was published in 1996, the 83-year-old Virginia Hamilton Adair was widely hailed as a literary comet. Her third,
Living on Fire, offers yet another chance to marvel at Adair's poetic gifts. And with the thousands of poems rumored to be remaining in her enormous stockpile, we may well be sky gazing longer than we had any right to expect.
Given the poet's age, the tendency toward the elegiac in Living on Fire is no surprise. But these are not the poems of a cranky senior citizen. Instead, they're suffused with frankness and subversive humor, revolving around randy guinea pigs or furtive, fumbling love in a swerving roadster. Much of the nostalgia can be appreciated by old and young alike--by all those readers, in fact, who like their pleasures simple and their nature uncomplicated. "In the days before RV's," the author reminds us, "the sound of tent pegs being driven in was music." Several of these bucolics seem ripe and ready for the anthologies, where they'll find homes next to Adair's contemporaries, Elizabeth Bishop, Theodore Roethke, and Robert Lowell.
Living on Fire covers a range of poetic forms, with a fondness for rhyme that Adair attributes to her own blindness (the rhymes help her to envision the shape of the lines). Sightlessness is also a frequent subject, albeit one she approaches without a grain of self-pity. Indeed, the sensitivity with which Adair adapts to, and even embraces, her blindness is often inspiring:
From mountain summits that I cannot see,
the wind has brought the taste of snow to me
and night returns me, with a breath of frost,
the rim of white on Baldy, nine years lost. Blind to abundance when I was not blind,
I breathe one rose and hold it in my mind.
Adair's poems offer an abundance of linguistic pleasures. And along with helping us to better understand our elders, they demonstrate a quiet dignity that all of us, poets or not, might well aspire to.
--John Ponyicsanyi
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
From Publishers Weekly
Drawing on new work and work composed over the last 60 or so years, Adair has released one volume every two years, beginning with 1996's debut smash Ants on the Melon. Her last book, Beliefs and Blasphemies, centered on religious themes, and did not do nearly as well; Living on Fire returns to the multi-part, multi-subject scheme of the first. Unfortunately, the Bishop-like descriptive power and lightness that drove Ants are not much in evidence here. One poem ends "All at once it seems sad for the leaves/ never to return to their safe place along the bough." Another addresses "You, Aphrodite in ebony, seven feet tall,/ ....You are the stuff of the new world/ emerging from its racist and intemperate history,/ with song, dance, and laughter./ Do not be paraniod// about Great-Grandma's bondage;/ white grandmas, too, were slaves to this and that/ morals and manners that never hampered you,/ travelling tall to an arrogant drum beat." Of the five sections--"Generations"; "Notes and Noises"; "The Fluted Shell"; "Mindsight" (dealing with the poet's recent blindness); "Sand Gardens"--all contain rhymed poems in traditional forms, and are infused with the wit and play of a sophisticated sensibility that can also, as in Beliefs, be nondidactically religious. It's not enough to carry the collection, but it does provide some genuinely affecting moments, as in "Cloud of Unseeing": "sometimes shapes reappear/ like the pair of scissors, not long ago,/ or a whole scenario, as in the old days/ before the shapes and colors ended/ and my fingers became puzzling parts/ of a creature I can barely imagine." (Mar.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.