Reviews of Wake Wake Wake

From New Letters

No One Gets Out of There Alive

If you haven’t seen much poetry about West Virginia, there’s a good reason. The canon of West Virginia poetry comprises only a few poets, most notably James Wright. A handful of contemporary poets includes Louise McNeill, Irene McKinney, Maggie Anderson, and James Harms.

It’s time to add another name near the top of that list—Valerie Nieman. Nieman’s poetry has none of the celebration of Appalachia that characterizes much of the other contemporary poetry about West Virginia. Yes, there are characteristic landscapes, flora, and fauna, and, of course, coal miners. But her poems make no attempt to romanticize the reality of life in West Virginia. Her gaze does not avert from bleeding feet or hissing lungs.

 

Nieman’s poetry bears the taste of wild game, like the deer, rabbit, and small mammals that mark her pages, and the recipe makes her poetry a pleasure to consume.

Some people cannot abide wild

meat, the resinous aroma,

the color

like knife-openings

in the palms of their hands

 

. . . Still, those of us who eat

have a duty to know—to hunker down

and smell fresh droppings gleaming

like berries on the path,

hear the snort of the lead doe

warning into flight

a band of yearlings.

For Nieman, the land is a living element, at times revered, at times hostile. People and animals cross paths often, eat each other or each other’s parts or waste products, sometimes merge identities. In “Expedition,” the narrator roams across the land, eventually becoming the land itself, but along the way,

she ate lethargic ants

and grubs with useless fat-man’s legs,

peeled the bark from cherry trees

and chewed the green lining, like the frayed

lining of her coat.

In “The Increase of the Earth,” a narrator eats the soil itself, despite the death and decay that creates it.

A body’s gonna eat a peck a dirt,

anyways

dirt draws itself up out of the places where men spat,

from the feathers of wild birds shot over fields

. . . from the slops of dishwater thrown,

bones of mice and legs of cows

that the dogs carry about after the slaughtering,

all into the red clay

...

I put the spoon in my mouth

and chew the dirt like it was gristle to my teeth.

Nieman’s characters take what they can get from the land, and sometimes they give back to the land. In “Farm Wife,” the gift is blood.

. . . see the lines

at the backs of her bare heels

like cracks parched in clay,

. . . the blood of her weariness

drips from her broken feet

and sows itself among the ripened corn.

In “Pissing in the Woods,” the narrator, during the act in the title, adds back to the soil as

[my] spray veers

runs down my leg

twisting a path

to earth

wetting leaves

and soil

fragrance on its way

to ammonia

As her urine becomes part of the landscape, she becomes a doe.

I leave a marker

like the doe

by the pond

that pauses

urinates

moves on

restless

for the buck that follows

tastes her need.

You can’t write about West Virginia without writing about its coal mines and its miners. In “A Moment’s Peace,” a miner lies dying in bed: “A miner’s life goes on / as long as he feels / the shift of the earth around him.” The title refers to the peace a dying miner seeks from his hovering wife who is

urging my own shallow

sucking at the bottled oxygen

the labor of thirty dark years

waged all over again

in my tunneled lungs

Nieman’s dying miner recalls his rescue from a roof collapse that buried him up to his waist. In the ensuing years, the very land the miner dug into became a part of his body, and this miner knows death doesn’t like being cheated.

 

It’s been here

waiting a long time now,

in the useless hollows of my lungs:

black lung, they say, and emphysema,

the word like air hissing out

a punctured chest.

When the day’s mail arrives, delivered by “a friend like any man whose cap light / shines on you in a close place,” the miner’s wife discovers an errant letter, and in the neighborly West Virginia way, she must run the letter over to its proper recipient, fretting all the way. The miner seizes the opportunity for a moment’s peace.

I’ve been portioning out

my breath, waiting.

The house’s quiet, absolutely

quiet; it eases like a church

when the parishioners have gone . . .

I see a bird’s shadow move across

the window glass.

I see the shadows of the trees

across the floor . . .

I see my breath move across

the bits of dust

and then they swim undisturbed.

Just like that Nieman will take your breath away, and you will see that Wake Wake Wake has nothing to do with sleeping.

                                   By Tom Lombardo


From Main Street Rag, Winter 2006/2007

Valerie Nieman’s Wake Wake Wake is her first, full-length collection of poetry, though she has published two chapbooks, How We Live and Slipping Out of Old Eve, two novels, Survivors and Neena Gathering, and one short story collection, Fidelities. Nieman’s versatility is admirable and evident in these poems which range from formal (the lovely “A Gift of Collected Sonnets”) to the form poem (“Pissing in the Woods,” which looks something like a stream).

Nieman is from West Virginia (as am I) and her poetry reflects the harsh beauty found in that still-wild state. The collection is divided into three sections, What Has Passed, A Watch By Night, and Stir Up, as Passions, or Evoke, as an Echo. In the first section, Nieman explores her memories of mother, land, neighbors, and the natural world. Her poems are gritty and as down to earth as digging toes into slick creek slime. Listen: Ridge farm, early spring:/ I nose along the wet/ belly of the land,/ the hummocked fields,/ dead grass furrowed/ by voles and frost.// Here: A waft of skunk,/ maybe the urine/ of a fox,/ or flesh leaking/ from the nibbled arc/ of a fungus.

No nostalgic view of nature is found here. Instead, Nieman’s love of the world is discovered in her deep attention to its details, which she embraces with the ferocity of a new mother, even when those details include the messy business of birth and death and anything in between.

Besides great descriptions of the mountain world, Nieman’s poems can be humorous and quite lively. Take the first line in “Farm Wife,” for example. You can tell a country woman/by her feet. I love that! The rest of the poem follows the woman’s feet through the seasons of farming life, ending with By harvest the blood of her weariness/drips from her broken feet/and sows itself amidst the ripened corn.

Nieman doesn’t sugar-coat anything in these poems, and her unvarnished truth-telling adds strength and character to these words, a quality I welcome.

In the second section, the poems become character studies: a stranger describing the way the land used to look, a man talking about his life with his woman, someone coveting a dead neighbor’s ladder. My favorite, though, isn’t about people; instead, it’s about trees, “Night Alone”: The trees, remembering/ that they are sky/go back to it,/sky emptying/snow among the branches,/the branches lifting/up their dark selves,/the burned-work/of sun and air,/the living cinder,/until sky and tree/are the same,/are night,/and my shuttle/soul lies down.

The final section is a collage of images and narratives about people who live in the Appalachian Mountains and die there. This section is a fine way to end the collection—it’s almost a slideshow of West Virginia life.
Nieman’s collection is a worthy one and the cover is sumptuous, too.

                             By Anne Barnhill