Lawrence Barrett Review of I Am South by Donna Snyder, Virgoray
Press, 2010; Available at www. virgoraypress.blogspot.com.
Donna Snyder, an accomplished, well-known and published El Paso poet and writer has delivered her first book, or rather chapbook, with a style that can be characterized as uniquely her own. Not one to obfuscate meanings, Snyder writes with searing clarity and in-your-face commentary that is refreshing because, thank God, one does not have to sit and agelessly ponder a puzzle-work of abstractions.
I can’t write subtleties by nature
I articulate experience in blatant terms
I name the emotion
Snyder also employs
hugely scenic, dramatic and emotive imagery which sort of shimmers and moves
her work along, at times, embryonic and dreamlike. Snyder begins her work with
an ekphrastic piece, “A Pastel Study in Shadow.” Snyder writes in “Part Three” of her “Pastel
Study”:
She sits alone with her guest
In the non-light of dusk
Her feet firm on the floor
Calls it by name without distress
Hands warm on sloped thighs
When the light fades
The shade will eat
The lilac dust
Snyder reaches a crescendo of haiku
simplicity that undulates like most of her work with a premise of sadness akin
to the ancient sorrow of mystic Irish Bards. Her craftsmanship as a poet really
shines through with the brevity and jazzy rhythms of her shorter pieces. “him
all Jack Kerouac and shit” slides off the tongue like scat singing:
her
all this is only just for now you know
An
ephemeral spring so drink up fast
When
it ended she hardly noticed lost
So
was she in grief for pretty words
Mirror
shards piled like minnowy regrets
All
caught up in the moment she almost knew
Snyder
effortlessly captures a music in her work which is certainly the mark of any
good poet. “Brother” falls like a short waltz across the page and “Blame it on
Neruda” twists with wit and nice turn of
phrase. “Dreaming in Cards” ripples with smooth transitions of potent imagery
measured alongside a slow beat. “I Am
South,” Snyder’s title piece, bristles like a poetic manifesto in that Snyder
sums up not only what dimensions of north and south make her the artist she is today
but also what very visceral and gut sense her experience of poetry is like: “South is where I learned to swallow Pablo Neruda
like rum.” Truly, at moments, Snyder’s poems intoxicate.