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5.0 out of 5 stars
Ken Pobo starts fine small press career with this book., September 23, 1997
This review is from: Musings from the porchlit sea
Kenneth Pobo (now professor of English at Widener University) was in graduate school when he released this, his first book of poems. It has the energy of a committed young adult mind awash in the throes of poetic ecstasy. Although he has published several other chapbooks since then, and written a great deal of work in hundreds of little magazines, his earliest collection still packs quite a punch. One sonnet, "The Scuttlers," typifies the sharpness of his language: "Hello. I'm a suburban insect / burrowing into homes, chewing cash," go the first lines. It turns out the "suburban insect" is simply a commuter on a train, but Pobo transforms the figure into a Kafkaesque creation. Another poem is a sustained line-by-line parody of T. S. Eliot called "The Disco Version of The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufock": "I have measured out my life with AM tunes," he writes. This books bristles with so much life that it's a shame it's out of print. Some small press entrepreneur ought to collect the fiercest material in this and his later books (as well as his extensive catalogue of poems in little magazines and original anthologies) for a "greatest hits" selected poems. The "AM tunes" that inspired this fine writer's work would find a welcoming audience in the intimate but committed community of poetry lovers.
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