20 Books of Summer, 11–12: Gillian Clarke Poetry and Ross Gay Essays

It might not look like I’ll finish the 20 Books of Summer challenge in time, but I’ve got it all planned out and should be reviewing the last few on the final day! My initial foodie idea has turned into a micro-theme that joins only about six of the titles in total. I’ve swapped in various other things along the way, such as a couple of poetry collections and novellas (note to self: always include at least a few very short books!), but the focus has been on getting through stuff from my own shelves, especially recent acquisitions and work by women.

Today I have an excellent poetry collection infused with the language of gardening and geology and reflecting on two crises of the early 2000s, and a book of mini-essays about noticing the small pleasures that make life worth living.

 

Making the Beds for the Dead by Gillian Clarke (2004)

I look out for black-and-white Carcanet spines whenever I’m scanning the poetry section in a secondhand bookshop. Clarke’s was a new name for me (the National Poet of Wales from 2008 to 2016, she’s now 86) but the blurb attracted me and this ended up being exactly the sort of poetry I love: full of colours and nature imagery, profuse with alliteration and slant rhymes, relishing its specialist terminology, and taking on the serious subject matter of manmade disasters. Several medium-length sequences are devoted to gardening (“The Middleton Poems” and “Nine Green Gardens”) and geology (“The Stone Poems”); some earlier pieces are ekphrastic, or dedicated to particular poets.

Clarke remembers the delight she took as a child in the unfamiliar vocabulary of the Bible, “a narrative of spells / in difficult columns on those moth-thin pages, / words to thrill the heart with a strange music.” The book teems with animals – though, alas, many of them are dead (as in “Adders” and “Taxidermy”). The title sequence, indeed is about the foot and mouth disease outbreak that decimated the UK livestock population in 2001. Farmers were forced to cull their flocks and news footage showed mountains of carcasses burning. She hovers over the catastrophe, imagining herself into the minds of family farmers, gossiping onlookers, and a traumatized vet. Just as one crisis was coming to an end, September 11 came – another unforgettable tragedy, commemorated with “The Fall.” A very affecting collection, all told. I’ll be sure to read more by Clarke. (Secondhand – Bridport Old Books, 2023)

A favourite passage, from “The Yew Tunnel in Winter”:

Listen to sap rise, unstoppable flood,

for all the centuries as the tap-roots grew,

pumping through branches to the stirring bud

from deepest earth. In graveyards they say a yew

sends a root into the mouths of all the dead.

Here, sense all that power snowed in and still,

shut in the dream of winter and history

at the end of a muffled lane

 

The Book of Delights by Ross Gay (2019)

“Perhaps delight is like after the great cosmic finger has pointed at something, and that something … appears.”

Gay is better known as a poet, with several collections to his name, and teaches at Indiana University. This book project started as a challenge to self to write a daily essay about something that was good in his life, quickly and longhand. He started on his 42nd birthday (August 1) and continued for a full year; there are 102 micro-essays here, so he managed one every few days. They are about everything or nothing much, depending on how you look at it: an adored foodstuff or piece of music, a dream, a surprise encounter with a stranger, what was growing in his garden at the time, etc.

One essay is titled “The Jenky,” about the crooked and makeshift. Gay watches the birds enjoying a dead tree in his (deliberately neglected) yard, and notes a sign reading “Caution: Bees on Bridge” and thereby making space for nature. A few of the more memorable incidents involve plane travel. One time he flies with a tomato seedling in his lap and finds that people treat him more kindly. He gets an unexpectedly enthusiastic response from a security guard when he mentions that he’s on his way to read poems and realizes later that, by some quirk of regional American accents, the man thought he’d said “reading palms.”

Although I enjoyed the book more as I went along, something held me back from loving it. There weren’t enough sentiments that I recognized, and the loose, informal style wasn’t always for me. While you get glimpses into his upbringing and travels, I tend to prefer a memoir. It may also be that Gay and I are just different personalities. The delight he takes in other people’s oddities suggests he might be an extrovert; he truly enjoys being spoken to, or even touched (on the shoulder, for instance), by strangers, whereas I don’t particularly. Part of this is about minority group bonding for him: he writes of the “Negreeting” exchanged between Black people passing each other on a street. There were also a few too many mentions of him peeing into bottles or in his car.

So I liked this, but maybe not enough to try more by Gay, though I should probably see what his verse is like. I was glad to have read it, especially when I realized I can only think of about 20 books I’ve read by Black men. Ever. Yikes. (New – Christmas gift, 2022)

19 responses

  1. Elle's avatar

    The project of the Ross Gay reminds me a bit of JB Priestley’s Delight—have you read that? Very similar idea (and apparently Priestley did it because he was repeatedly accused of being curmudgeonly and set out to prove people wrong!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      No, I’ve not read any Priestley, in fact. Gay comes across as quite happy-go-lucky in general, but maybe it was an attempt to find the good in a fairly dark period of recent history.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

    I was interested to hear what you’d think of the Gay essays. You might like his verse better–I’m thinking the one with Gratitude in the title and not the newer one about basketball. Your assertion about his personality is likely spot-on, and his work–whether about sports or random meetings in a coffee shop–does turn around touch quite a bit. He’s the keynote at a literary festival I’ll attend in October, so I’ll get to see how he is in person then.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ll give his poetry a try. A sports theme would usually be a real turnoff for me!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Carolyn O's avatar

        His poems are *wonderful.* One of my favorite poets. Be Holding–which, yes, is related to basketball–is a marvel. Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude is a book I love to give as a present.

        Liked by 2 people

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        Great to have your backup on the recommendation, Carolyn!

        Liked by 1 person

    2. Carolyn O's avatar

      Rebecca, I’m presenting at that festival in October! Hope to run into you!

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

        What a small world! Lit Youngstown’s festival is a highlight of my year, and this is my 6th year attending and 3rd serving on the planning committee. Please say hi–I’d love to connect in person.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        Delighted to have facilitated this connection! 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  3. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    I’m glad you enjoyed the Gay essays enough even if you didn’t fully connect with the book. I don’t know what about him speaks to me so fully, but I just adore him. I’ve gone so far as to search for his name in podcasts just to hear him interviewed even on podcasts I’ve never heard of. We both share a love of gardening and basketball, so that’s something. I echo the recommendation about Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude – wonderful collection of poetry. I really hope I get to see him speak in person some day.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Lots of love for that particular book. His work is slightly hard to find over here, though the essays were available in paperback. I’m sure I’ll come across one of his poetry collections one day.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

        After I sent that comment I checked to see if he’s touring anywhere near here and he is coming to Asheville, NC in the fall! I’m going to try and go if I can work out childcare.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Julé Cunningham's avatar

    I absolutely agree with you about Gillian Clarke, it’s not often I come across her work here, but what I’ve read has been wonderful and stuck with me.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I don’t know how I’d never heard of her! Superb.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Liz Dexter's avatar

    The extrovert / introvert comment on the Gay made me think about Emma and my new Reading Together book, Hunter Davies’ The Heath, where he shouts across to friends and chats to whoever, to the horror of his wife! I am falling a bit behind on my 20 Books however I just checked and realised we also have 1 September – although that’s my State of the TBR post day it’s good to know I can sneak in a final review then if I need! I am reading Book 17 and nearly finished the Brian Bilston poems which are Book 20, but 17 is quite long and so is 19! I bet you’ll do it just fine, though!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ll be reviewing the last 3-4 on the 1st itself! Because I read so many books at once, it looks like I’m not making progress, but I’ll finish a load this weekend and then the rest in the final week.

      Like

  6. […] favourite from the 20 was a novel, Search by Michelle Huneven, then Making the Beds for the Dead by Gillian Clarke (poetry), followed by two chef’s memoirs, A Cook’s Tour by Anthony Bourdain […]

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  7. […] Making the Beds for the Dead by Gillian Clarke: Full of colour and nature imagery, profuse with alliteration and slant rhymes, relishing its specialist terminology, and taking on the serious subject matter of manmade disasters. Several sequences are devoted to gardening and geology; some pieces are ekphrastic, or dedicated to particular poets. The title sequence tackles the 2001foot and mouth disease outbreak. “The Fall” is on 9/11. Very affecting stuff. […]

    Like

  8. […] was the National Poet of Wales from 2008 to 2016. I ‘discovered’ her just last year through Making the Beds for the Dead, which shares with this eleventh collection a plague theme: there, the UK’s foot and mouth […]

    Like

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