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Poetry in Sounds 2

by V/A

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about

Poetry in Sounds is a new music contest hosted by Naviar Records. Every month we’ll present a recently published poetry collection and invite musicians worldwide to make a song inspired by the main themes of the publication. Parallel to the weekly Naviar Haiku challenge, Poetry in Sounds is a monthly contest where the author and Naviar’s team will select the three best tracks and reward the artists with free music software or books.

This project aims to strengthen the bond between music and poetry further, offer musicians a regular opportunity to hone their craft and get new tools to explore a broader range of sounds.

www.naviarrecords.com/poetry-in-sounds/

Synopsis:

In her third collection, Nicole Stellon O’Donnell explores the landscapes of memory, argument, and wilderness. These poems deconstruct memoir, dig at the roots of philosophical argumentation, and critique the role of the poet as an observer of the natural world. From manicured baseball fields to the debate podium, from the lobby of the public pool to the hallowed Alaskan cabin where John Haines once sat down to write, these poems push against the notion that the solitary self is the arbiter of truth.
Extract:

Advice to the Young Right Fielder

Hold the glove to your face,
cupping your chin.
Peek through the holes
and the world will telescope out.

See your mother sitting in the stands.
See the pitcher swoop her fast arm.
Breathe in warm glove.

You have been put here
because you are good
at being wrong.

Be wrong well.

Catalog the dandelions,
the lumpy lawn,
the foul line’s chalky trace,
the cloud that rises from first base.

Stand, unready,
in the green nothing
you have been allotted.
Close your eyes.
Don’t worry.

Everything never
comes your way.

—–

Lonely Owl

Evenings
early and late
under the star-black sky
punctuated
by satellites
the boreal owl calls
from somewhere
in the aspen.
Five beats.
Not who,
but whowhowhowhowho,
meaning Why am I still alone?

His feathered loneliness,
was so much like yours
when you went out
to feed the chickens
and look at the stars,
and looked back to see me
through the living room window:
laptop open
face lit with green light,
so unaware of you,

you stood on the deck
hooting at me: five beats
copying the owl in his sadness
calling me outside to see
the aurora and stars
and breathe in the cold moment
with you.

I would love to say
I heard you,
but I didn’t.

I never even looked up.

——

The Other Side in April

It’s not greener. Admit it.
Muddy, punctuated
with burned spots
from the dogs.
Over the fence, familiar,
the other side lies.

Stand on tiptoe.

This late
spring
snow clings
to the fence posts
and paced paths,
months of boot prints
that won’t melt
until May.

It’s all the same,
persistent
unmelting.
In every yard,
a playhouse
buckling
under the pressure.




About the author:

Nicole Stellon O’Donnell is the author of two previous collections of poetry, Steam Laundry and You Are No Longer in Trouble. Her poems have appeared in Prairie Schooner, Beloit Poetry Journal, Passages North, and other literary journals. She received both an Individual Artist Award and an Artist Fellowship from the Rasmuson Foundation, as well as a Boochever Fellowship and an Alaska Literary Award from the Alaska Arts and Culture Foundation. Her teaching has been recognized with a Fulbright Distinguished Award in Teaching and a Heinemann Fellowship. She lives and writes in Fairbanks, Alaska.

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released May 6, 2022

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Naviar Records London, UK

Naviar is a community and label that explores the intersection between music and traditional Japanese poetry.

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