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EnjoyableReview Date: 2008-01-07
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A keeperReview Date: 2000-07-20

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Rafael Alvarez reviews "The Plum Flower Dance" Review Date: 2008-03-25
the plum flower dance
review by Rafael Alvarez, examiner.com/baltimore
Today, I tell you about a beautiful book of poems: The Plum Flower Dance. And of the man who created it, an American factory worker who embraced the philosophy of the East, was saved by it and became a professor of the great poets who cleared the path before him.
- o -
I can never convince my father
That my best work is done in naps,
In the greenest of grass, near the smell
Of manure, in the song of neighing
And snorting, in the infinite music
That fills the word with bright meaning . . .
- o -
On the far side of the river in my Temple of Books, at the back of a closet deep in the Bleeding Heart of the Holy Land, lies the unpublished memoir of the man who wrote that remarkable stanza: Aafa Michael Weaver.
Titled "Heaven Has No Horses," it sits behind a pair of black Converse high tops worn out at the heel and a pair of cowboy boots from Muleshoe, Texas that always pinched my feet. Weaver's remembrance is guarded by crooked stacks of poetry books: Whitman, to whom Weaver has been compared in earnest; Lorca, Daniel Berrigan and Robert Frost, an overflow waiting for the next shelf.
A poet kid I know in Los Angeles, homeless by the choice in the way Walt Whitman chose to brave the Civil War front to hand out books, found a ragged English text in a coffee house not long ago and raced through it until Frost put the brakes on.
"The beady spider, the flower like a froth . . .
and the moth carried like a paper kite . . ."
Said the kid, hungry but not begging: "The spider is desperate. I relate."
There is no desperation in "The Plum Flower Dance," not in poems of ancient radios broadcasting ballgames or idle clarinets in the summer. Each page is but a request for a moment of your time.
"Alone, I meditate on the invisible . . ."
This is not a passive book. It simply understands, as St. Teresa of Avila understood when she counseled "let nothing perturb you," that there is no gain in desperation.
What the sages know is what Weaver submitted himself to learning from the time of his childhood, a black kid exposed to both city and country in the last days of segregation.
Weaver watched his beloved uncle blast a neighbor's dog with a shotgun and followed orders to dump the corpse on a pile of junk to be burned. Later, he stood dry eyed, frozen under "layers and layers of loss," as the glue man hauled his beloved Appaloosa away, the horse declared loco for eating wood.
His life was changed, as it would continue to change for years to come (centuries before Beatle George, Avila's Teresa also preached that all things must pass), on the Christmas he found a Brownie camera under the tree.
Though the camera became Weaver's third eye, "there was something in life I was not seeing," he wrote in Heaven Has No Horses. "There was something in me I wanted to capture . . . but it was many years away, inside [of] me."
The things hidden deep inside of Aafa Weaver are given voice in "The Plum Flower Dance," two decades of poems [1985 to 2005] released this autumn by the University of Pittsburgh Press.
The book is that rare bird, both weightless and profound, whose journey out into the world is apt to bring laurels home for its author.
I don't follow poetry the way I study fiction, but like I said earlier, people who know what they're talking about are comparing Weaver to Whitman.
Of course, by the end of Whitman's life he was scrambling for a menial civil servant's job to keep food on the table and ink in his pen, but that's the ballgame. The point is this:
"Can you contain my most intimate whisper,
settle it down after it has entered you,
make it a part of you and still cling
to my hand as gently as your eyes hold me?"
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Comprehensive source on political leadershipReview Date: 1997-11-02

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One of the Best Poets Writing TodayReview Date: 2000-03-25
/ compare with the humanity/ of bearing one's wrist/ tenderly, shyly, as though a teenager,/ to those stilleto lips." An American Book Award winner and the author of the books "The Post Rapture Diner," and "All of the Above," Barresi's poetry is marked by an unerring empathy for human nature balanced by a gentle sense of whimsy. For instance, in her poem, "When I Think About America Sometimes (I Think About Ralph Kramden,) disparate images from one of the most pedestrian stereotypes in American culture ("To the moon, Alice!") are breathed new life, made terribly and poignantly real. "...picture their lovemaking-/ the sweat he heaved into her with a fat man's/ slog and fury, not/ grace, don't call it grace,/ until their headboard,/ scrolled with grapes and angels in the old manner,/ must have quaked like rails underground." There is no trace of the amateur in her work. In Barresi's formidable hands, words become something alive, and beautiful.
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A must-have book for anyone doing premarital counselingReview Date: 2000-05-19

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brilliant translationReview Date: 1998-10-15
-Robert G

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A Journey from China to ManhattanReview Date: 2004-07-13
Shao Wei was once a young child dreaming by the Yangtze river. She contemplated her future at a young age and decided she would become a writer. She became a voracious reader and fed her curiosity about the world through books. After living in Wanxian City, east of Sichuan Province, she moved to New York City. Here she was thrown into a new life and found solace in writing about her surroundings. She earned her master's degree in creative writing. She now teaches English composition. This is her first poetry collection in English.
Shao Wei's poetry is at times beyond imaginative, infused with magic and often feels musical. Musical in the way her words entice you to read an entire poem, not stopping until the last word. In the beauty of her writing, a subtle dissatisfaction sometimes appears that seems to represent a intense desire for a place that is anywhere but here. Her words can at times be the meanderings of a discontented mind that is seeking to find contentment in a river of words.
In "Manhattan" she turns the overwhelming into a dreamy place of wild animals and ancient mysteries. Many of her poems speak of an unspeakable loneliness and a desire to belong to a demanding planet, demanding its own space, not to know her dreams.
The moon is always big when I feel lonely
I measure the distance between us
everyone is busy earning a living
no time to care about a girl and her dreams
I loved "The Absent Goodbye," because it reminded me of my grandmother's room that was like the nest in her house. She also left in her sleep and this poem has a certain warmth I could relate to, although it was written about Shao Wei's grandfather.
In the next poem, "Dear Death" there is an almost sorrowful, yet blatant sarcasm. It is hopelessness drenched in longing and reluctant resolution. Wei expresses her desire to be taken with all those she has lost. She says: "If you take them away from me, why don't you take us all?" Her writing often speaks to the reader with the voice of an inner child who remembers the past in vivid images.
"A Fairy Tale" begins with images of a lonely girl tasting sugar and quickly evolves into a story of lonely ecstasy and eternal contemplation. She seems to fear living a life without purpose.
The amusing story about rice, fond memories of planting a peach tree and the almost symbolic tasting of her first apple all make this book of poetry a satisfying and comforting read.
~The Rebecca Review
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Bolivia�s Uncle Tom�s CabinReview Date: 2003-07-08
The melodramatic cruelty and injustice of the patron is effective but so manipulative, I liked better the parts of the book where indígenas interact with indígenas and patrones with patrones. The funeral of one character (who dies from a disease after being sent on a dangerous trip by the patron) is incredible reading, the syncretic religion and insane debauched drunkenness. The costumbrismo of life on the hacienda, sacrifices and superstitions, its economy of sheep and farming and fish, totora and family life, all great. Meanwhile the conversations btw the patron and his city friends visiting the hacienda are interesting -- one is a feckless liberal-romantic writer who must surely be part self-portrait by the author, a fool who reads a ridiculous Inka fable to the others and puts them to sleep, and is killed with them all when the Indians rise up at the end.

more WOW than wowReview Date: 2008-08-26
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