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Home::Poetry
Antidotes for an Alibi
Author : Amy King
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]. Spam emails More free articles Related articles
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Stoning the Devil: AnnMarie Eldon's some2 Seminal post-avant texts like Facings, Antidotes for an Alibi, In the Weaver's Valley, and Bird Hoverer share this dual preoccupation in common-- to enact Derrida's there is nothing outside the text, while simultaneously subverting it ...Antidotes for an Alibi Amy King's prototypal full-length collection, Antidotes for an Alibi, insists that we investigate the dishonorable clearness of our actions and the goals that prompt us. How does digit actually intend from "A" to "B"and is there ever ... Catherine Daly reviews Antidotes for an Alibi Amy King Antidotes for an Alibi BlazeVox Books ISBN 0-9759227-5-0 2005. These poems read to me like poetry versions of flash fiction. Now, I like flash fiction very much, but I like the more fabulistic kind. ... : : : BlazeVOX [blogoscope] : : : » Blog Archive » get your happy ... Amy King Antidotes for an Alibi Amy King I’m The Man Who Loves You Rodney Koeneke Musee Mechanique Mark Lamoureux Astrometry Orgonon Pat Lawrence Journals From the Time of the Radar Dog Ruth Lepson & Walter Crump Morphology ... Antidotes for an Alibi 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”? ... Stoning the Devil: Book Review: Amy King: Antidote for an Alibi Amy King stands out from the post-avant pack, because she has achieved a very difficult feat in this book, Antidotes for an Alibi-- somehow, she has taken the conceptual assumptions of post-avant and humanized them, made them intimate. ... Turntable + Blue Light: Amy King Amy King is the author of I'm the Man Who Loves You and Antidotes for an Alibi (BlazeVOX Books). She is the moderator for the Poetics List and the Women's Poetry Listserv. King also curates the Brooklyn-based reading series, ... The Multifarious Array: First Reading of the Season!! Amy King is the author of I'm the Man Who Loves You and Antidotes for an Alibi, both from Blazevox Books, and most recently, Kiss Me With the Mouth of Your Country (Dusie Press). She is the moderator for the Poetics List and the Women's ... catherine daly reviews antidotes for an alibi amy king antidotes for an alibi blazevox books isbn 0-9759227-5-0 2005. these poems feature to me aforementioned genre versions of winkle fiction. now, i aforementioned winkle falsity rattling much, but i aforementioned the more ... reviews reviews boog city — mark lamoureux reviews “i’m the man who loves you” coldfront mag — matt hart reviews “i’m the man who loves you” cordite poetry review — steven farry reviews “antidotes for an alibi” cutbank reviews — brandi homan ...
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