narration offers drive and energy to Chandler's poetry
pp. 92
pp. 92
Publisher: Peterloo Poets, 2008
Chandler’s 2008 collection is a good blend of tragic and
comic poetry. The long title poem imagines a modern civil war sometime in the
future, bombarding us with images of the violence and devastation that seems to
have no end, yet which is above all violently funny. As a man decapitates his
wife with ‘one of his baked bean tins / packed with Semtex’, and Eton holds out
‘against a murderous mob / for two more weeks’; as ‘the Scots … / caused
trouble where they could around the edge’, and ‘the Irish as usual caught the
worst of it, / side dish of horrors, as an afterthought’; as all of this takes
place, Kylie, ‘going strong at 60’, is kept ‘off the front page’.
The story of the war is told by an old man over dinner, with
the occasional interjection from the frame narrative, such as, ‘(Pass the soup,
will you? Same again, I’m afraid - / home made potato … Well, that’s how it
is.)’ which really highlights the drive and energy that narration offers to
Chandler’s poetry, and which in this instance makes the war appear to be
thoroughly silly, told as it is in such a hurry between mouthfuls of soup and
amongst the prosaic clattering of cutlery.
The next poem, a long piece in eleven parts called
‘Postcards From Auschwitz’, expertly twists our expectations of the collection,
taking us into the concentration camps of the Second World War thick with human
bodies and experiences. Reading this piece from our perspective, knowing the
true nature of the events, we can see that behind these seemingly innocent
‘postcards’ there is an insidious presence lurking, one which taints the naiveté
of such statements as ‘Here is the table / for our postcards. All may be well.’
written by the hand of an optimistic prisoner.
The shorter, more autobiographical pieces under the section
‘Looking Myself Up’ are a kind of breather, though not in the sense of the
poet’s inventiveness and style, which never slacken, but in terms of their
understatement and ease of exploration. It is as though the poet has taken an
audible breath, and where the opening two pieces are taut and intensely
crafted, these take on an air of the wistful musings one afternoon of a man
coming to terms, as we all are, with himself and with other people (usually
weird and wonderful people, such as in ‘The Tattoed Man’, ‘At the Cleaners’,
and ‘Martin’).
Thickly bracketing these poems on the other side of the book
are two more long pieces. ‘The Gap’, based on the reminiscences of a Mr Tom
Solomon of the deadly floods in Sea Palling, Norfolk in 1953, is an intensely
descriptive piece which once again attests to the narrative energy Chandler
infuses into his poetry. It is an immensely climactic poem, the best and most
absorbing of the collection, followed, fittingly, by ‘And Now For My Final
Trick’, a clever, self-reflexive trick
of a poem about Harry Houdini’s wish to expose spiritualism by failing his
final trick – to escape from death.
A book suitable for both readers and non-readers of poetry,
because of its fascinating subject matter and the accessible expression of the
poet’s ideas.
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