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Mercurochrome
 
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Mercurochrome [Paperback]

Wanda Coleman (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

"i am an outlaw, they assert./ there's a ten-digit number stamped on my frontal lobe." This sprawling eleventh collection of poems from the Los Angeles-based Coleman finds her zig-zagging between continuations of series begun in American Sonnets and the 1999 Lenore Marshall Prize-winning Bathwater Wine, and grief-stricken ruminations written out of her son's early death from cancer. Coleman, long a front-line voice in the battle against America's seemingly endless supply of institutionalized racism, sets her sights on store owners, academicians, and the brands of social hypocrisy particular to her home city: "the intellectuals are walking/ around with Boy Scout knives/ buried in their brains/ while over three hundred corpses a year/ are found rotting in Griffith Park." The six sections of the book are sharply set off via subject matter, with the dream-shaped, long-form meditations on consciousness in "A Kingdom of Clouds" and the smoldering race-based critiques in "Metaphysically Niggerish" especially strong. An eighty-one page section of imitations and transliterations of poets from Ammons to Zukofsky (using Mark Strand's anthology The Contemporary American Poets as a source) serves as a different kind of departure point, as Coleman creates dialogs with mostly White poets through a close study and recasting of their own lines: "The academy of the future has closed doors. / It is unwilling books banned, curtains drawn." (after John Ashbery) The book's length at times dilutes the poetry's overall power, perhaps a by-product of Black Sparrow's insistence on long manuscripts from its authors, but this is a minor complaint. In her mid-fifties, with a formidable collection of work already behind her, Coleman's emotional depth and battered, unwavering search for private and public levels of justice continues to expand. (Aug.) Forecast: Coleman has long published her novels (including Mambo Hips and Make Believe) short stories and many poetry collections with Santa Barbara-based Black Sparrow. This book will be well reviewed in the small-press community, and should generate larger-press interest in a selected or collected.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Review

Finalist for the 2001 National Book Award in Poetry:


"Wanda Coleman's poetry stings, stains, and ultimately helps heal wounds like the old-fashioned Mercurochrome of her title. No easy remedy for the lacerating American concerns of racism and gender bias, Coleman's poetry transforms pain into empathy. . . These searing, soaring poems challenge us to repair the fractures of human difference, and feel what it is to be made whole again." --The National Book Award Poetry Judges 2001, Stanley Plumly, Chair

Product Details

  • Paperback: 270 pages
  • Publisher: Black Sparrow Press (July 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1574231545
  • ISBN-13: 978-1574231540
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,203,006 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of America's Best Writers!!, July 30, 2001
Wanda Coleman has been publishing with Black Sparrow Press for nearly 25 years, which is amazing since she's only 55, and looks much younger than that. Even more amazing than the devotion she and BSP share, is the strength and vitality encompassed in each new volume they produce together. MERCUROCHROME, her latest, may be in fact her best. It is not too long, as the review above would suggest (her last collection of poems is nearly three years old now so there's plenty to print), nor is the power diluted. On the contrary, Coleman's voice is as strong as ever. And as diverse. I don't know if I've ever read a collection of sonnets or transliterations of mainly dead-white guys, that was so compelling. This book is as red-hot as the title suggests. Huzzah Wanda Coleman! P.S. I also wanted to praise the wonderful cover design by Barbara Martin on this, and so many other Black Sparrow books.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars beautiful and difficult like a woman that fascinates you but you wouldn't marry, November 23, 2007
By 
C. Tillman "poet-in-training" (Charlotte, NC, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Keep you dictionary close by, or a Wikipedia page up- hardly a poem went by that I didn't have to look something up or Google an arcane reference. But I think it's worth it. It's too vague a description perhaps but I love the rhythm of Coleman's poems, the way they flow down a page. Granted, you don't always know what you just "flowed" out of or into. She has this way, as do many poets, of saying something beautifully unintelligible; I frequently had the idea of a tapping her foot impatiently while a child completed a task, the task in this case being the deciphering of what was being said in the poem. But again- generally worth it. Poems like "south central los angeles deathtrip 1982", a series of vignettes about police brutality and corruption, and "amnesia fugue" are long, passionate, poems full of terrific imagery. One of my favorite lines in "amnesia fugue," which alternately addresses the speaker's father and an unnamed lover is

those tracks laid out from feet to horizon
spread your legs across them, cup your breasts
straddle the impact

Nice. Another fave of mine is "The Words are Still Burning" in which the speaker tells off a cousin who is well-educated but uppity, someone who imagines himself a social commentator while doing nothing to help society:

it doesn't take a degree in particle physics
to understand social injustice

thirty years of schmoozing over a chessboard,
empty rhetoric and chasing pu--y has not improved
your posture...
in your last incarnation you were pootbutt.in
this one, you are merely a poot (ll. 2-6, 9-10)

what you carry between your thighs is
not a sacred truth, but an integrity so minute
it can't even be detected with a magnifying glass (ll. 11-13)

how dare you complain that "little has changed"-
because in your cowardice you have not changed it... (ll. 29-30)

Not a bad read. There are many many diamonds in this rough if you'll dig. I'm betting the book is actually more of a gem than I have the patience to expound upon; my copy is all marked up with stars for emphasis, underlines, and copious footnotes from Wiki & Websters.

"anything worth having is worth working on and waiting for" -Betty Wright, "no pain, no gain" (or your momma, probably)

Kakalak 2006: An Anthology of Carolina Poets
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Addendum., October 16, 2001
Ms. Coleman's powerful collection MERCUROCHROME has just been nominated for the National Book Award in poetry. Quite an honor. Her last collection of poetry, BATHWATER WINE (Black Sparrow, 1998) won the 1999 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize, and her memoir LOVE-INS WITH NIETZSCHE (Wake Up Heavy, 2000) was nominated for the Pushcart Prize. It seems the literary world is standing up and taking note of one of our greatest modern poets.
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