A California haunted by death and suffused with sex is the subject of D. A. Powell’s biting collection of verse.
*Winner of the 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry*
I have this rearrangement to make:
symbolic death, my backward glance.
The way the past is a kind of future
leaning against the sporty hood.
—from "Bugcatching at Twilight"
In Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys - D. A. Powell's fifth book of poetry - the rollicking line he has made his signature becomes the taut, more discursive means to describing beauty, singing a dirge, directing an ironic smile, or questioning who in any given setting is the instructor and who is the pupil. This is a book that explores the darker side of divisions and developments, which shows how the interstitial spaces of boonies, backstage, bathhouse, or bar are locations of desire. With Powell's witty banter, emotional resolve, and powerful lyricism, this collection demonstrates his exhilarating range.
*Winner of the 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry*
I have this rearrangement to make:
symbolic death, my backward glance.
The way the past is a kind of future
leaning against the sporty hood.
—from "Bugcatching at Twilight"
In Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys - D. A. Powell's fifth book of poetry - the rollicking line he has made his signature becomes the taut, more discursive means to describing beauty, singing a dirge, directing an ironic smile, or questioning who in any given setting is the instructor and who is the pupil. This is a book that explores the darker side of divisions and developments, which shows how the interstitial spaces of boonies, backstage, bathhouse, or bar are locations of desire. With Powell's witty banter, emotional resolve, and powerful lyricism, this collection demonstrates his exhilarating range.
eBook
Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
Related collections and offers
Overview
*Winner of the 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry*
I have this rearrangement to make:
symbolic death, my backward glance.
The way the past is a kind of future
leaning against the sporty hood.
—from "Bugcatching at Twilight"
In Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys - D. A. Powell's fifth book of poetry - the rollicking line he has made his signature becomes the taut, more discursive means to describing beauty, singing a dirge, directing an ironic smile, or questioning who in any given setting is the instructor and who is the pupil. This is a book that explores the darker side of divisions and developments, which shows how the interstitial spaces of boonies, backstage, bathhouse, or bar are locations of desire. With Powell's witty banter, emotional resolve, and powerful lyricism, this collection demonstrates his exhilarating range.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781555975128 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Graywolf Press |
Publication date: | 11/18/2014 |
Sold by: | Macmillan |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 120 |
File size: | 2 MB |
About the Author
D. A. Powell is the author of five collections of poetry, including Chronic, winner of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award. He lives in San Francisco.
Read an Excerpt
Useless Landscape, or
A Guide for Boys
By D. A. Powell
Graywolf Press
Copyright © 2012 D. A. PowellAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-55597-695-8
CHAPTER 1
USELESS LANDSCAPE
The beauty of men never disappears
But drives a blue car through the stars.
—John Wieners
ALMONDS IN BLOOM
In heaven, I believe, even our deaths are forgiven.
—Dunstan Thompson
Who could sustain such pale plentitude
and not want to shake the knopped white blossoms
from the swarthy branches.
The petals seem more parchment, and more pure,
in her upright phalanges
with a box of soap flakes, tackling the mud-cake
somebody made on the quarter-sawn floor.
Just when we think we've been punished enough,
there's a bounty to contend with—
she's at the spinet, now, and every key's a plunker.
She hasn't had it tuned since the flood.
Yes, she really troubles heaven with her deaf singing.
But after all, it's heaven.
Even death will be forgiven.
TENDER MERCIES
The dandelions, ditch-blown brood,
the evening snow and dew-soaked phlox,
the Brewer's pea, the Jepson's pea
(these, the bright eyes of the viridian fields)
in chaparral, the hillside pea and angled pea,
intensities of light and pomp
that distress the easy upswept grass.
The smack the rain plants as it smudges past
and penetrates the canvas.
The smattering on field and railroad tracks,
both hardy blooms and dainty flowers,
the judge's house, the chicken farm,
a migratory camp, a flesh motel,
a stucco digs
where all that mitigates the August swelter
is the swamp cooler's immutable burr,
a straggling house that draws its water
from a hard-water well and flushes out
with the help of a crude sump pump.
Before the flatland is occluded
by the staunch of light at end of day,
I wanted to be content with all its surfaces:
weed, barb, crack, rill, rise ...
But every candid shoot and fulgent branch
depends upon the arteries beneath.
The houses have their siphons
and their circuit vents.
The heart—I mean the literal heart—
must rely upon its own plaqued valves;
the duodenal canal, its unremitting grumble.
The brain upon its stem,
and underneath,
a network, vast, of nerves that rationalize.
The earth's a little harder than it was.
But I expect that it will soften soon,
voluptuous in some age hence,
because we captured it as art
the moment it was most itself:
fragile, flecked with nimbleweed,
and so alone,
it almost welcomed its own ravishment.
I was a maiden in this versicolor plain.
I watched it change.
Withstood that change, the infidelities
of light, the solar interval, the shift of time,
the shift from farm to town.
I had a man that pressed me down
into the soil. I was that man. I was that town.
They call the chicory "ragged sailors" here:
sojourners who have finally returned
and are content to see the summer to its end.
Be unafraid of what the future brings.
I will not use this particular blue again.
—for Betty Buckley
CHERRY BLOSSOMS IN SPRING
I've already pieced it out in my head:
there's almost nothing to go back to.
The wide flat palm of the prickly pear
outside Bent Prop Liquors. I kid you
not that the air's so red, day's end,
that it unlooses a fat ribbon of regret.
Yet the air does not move; it hangs
its squalid rags on the post; it poops
dirty bats out of the public
library's colonnade. I wasn't the first
kid you raped. In this indifferent orchard
where many a shallow boy got dumped.
I think of you often. I think of you never
so much I dare to touch my stolen twig.
THE FLUFFER TALKS OF ETERNITY
I can only give you back what you imagine.
I am a soulless man. When I take you
into my mouth, it is not my mouth. It is
an unlit pit, an aperture opened just enough
in the pinhole camera to capture the shade.
I have caused you to rise up to me, and I
have watched as you rose and waned.
Our times together have been innumerable. Still,
like a Capistrano swallow, you come back.
You understand: I understand you. Understand
each jiggle and tug. Your pudgy, mercurial wad.
I am simply a hand inexhaustible as yours
could never be. You're nevertheless prepared to shoot.
If I could I'd finish you. Be more than just your rag.
LANDSCAPE WITH SECTIONS OF AQUEDUCT
If the crown of day is not gold, then it's a marvelous fake.
Merciful present tense: if the brown grass is always flowing,
if the sun is always just brushing the dry hills, and if
last summer's suicide is still a loner whose white t-shirt
knotted, so tight it had to be cut off his neck with a penknife,
then evening is the same bare patch and the same fat crows,
the crushed aluminum cans and the hamburger wrappers
or the ribbon of tire tread where a road crew hasn't come by.
They have taken him away and I do not know where he is laid.
Among the soft cheat and meadow barley, a live oak begs relief
from the hardened light, the beating of its own gnarled limbs,
and the unrelenting rustle of its own beige blooms that tumble
together shyly like a locker room of boys once boisterous, now
called to roll and suddenly bashful, clasping at dingy towels.
Let the dead be modest. Give the tree, solitary being who feeds
on wind and the mote of another's distant beauty, cause to brag.
Except that the kernel would fall upon the soil, it abides alone.
One guy peeled labels off beer bottles here; another climbed
the remaining concrete piles and wrote JUSTIN LOVES, wrote
STEPHEN LOVES, WROTE HANG 'EM HIGH—CLASS OF '93.
Cabbage moths flickered in tansy and clustered broom-rape;
bore the pain of creation for a little yellow dust, a smear of
light
on their fidgeting legs and the sudden buoyancy in updraft.
Ruin, by the wayside, you took as sacrament. You, abiding rock.
USELESS LANDSCAPE
A lone cloudburst hijacked the Doppler radar screen, a bandit
hung from the gallows, in rehearsal for the broke-necked man,
damn him, tucked under millet in the potter's plot. Welcome
to disaster's alkaline kiss, its little clearing edged with twigs,
and posted against trespass. Though finite, its fence is endless.
Lugs of prune plums already half-dehydrated. Lugged toward
shelf life and sorry reconstitution in somebody's eggshell kitchen.
If you hear the crop-dust engine whining overhead, mind
the orange windsock's direction, lest you huff its vapor trail.
Scurry if you prefer between the lime-sulphured rows, and cull
from the clods and sticks, the harvest shaker's settling.
The impertinent squalls of one squeezebox vies against another
in ambling pick-ups. The rattle of dice and spoons. The one café
allows a patron to pour from his own bottle. Special: tripe today.
Goat's head soup. Tortoise-shaped egg bread, sugared pink.
The darkness doesn't descend, and then it descends so quickly
it seems to seize you in burly arms. I've been waiting all night
to have this dance. Stay, it says. Haven't touched your drink.
BIDWELL PARK
When the previously withheld faces grew tough as flax
or softened into pliant pine in the umber wood, inclined
together, numerous, when the cobble crushed underfoot,
and pistachios cracked in their shells, grown heavy,
grown consummate among the nibs of leaves, then curious
seemed the stars, those nether eyes which scrutinized
each shape that stirred against the unlit trunks of trees.
He could say he knew the men he did not know. Arrived
in the cedar grove and parted, sated with little effort,
or left unsatisfied, ruminating upon such unfamiliar flesh
across the glade. Silent the approach, a fawn, fluid
through the damp grass, the current in the full creek
surrounding the mossy rocks, pulling them a spell
a little ways downstream, inevitable their deposit.
Thus he would peer the woods, and quarry eluded him,
sloughed that lustrous hide and slipped innominate away.
Retraction: there were times he stood the corsair's nip,
gained midnight's reticent stroke, the haphazard coitus
of loaded collegians stumbling the poison oak. Hermit
thrush or Wilson's snipe. Something bolts the dark,
flushed from the thick rushes, that most temporal cover.
THE KIWI COMES TO GRIDLEY, CA
At first it seems truly foreign, like the downy brown nutsack
in a health class textbook: almost too firm, almost too perfect
to be edible. If it gives to the touch, it's ready to pluck.
No robin's egg, though you might nestle it in your hands.
A few more boys deployed this week. Under jade green vines
they crawl on their crusty elbows, helmets tipped, their
backsides up. And they all went to bliss in their little skiff.
You may never understand the intersection of small & large,
conquest & defeat. For now, miraculous surges simply come,
a series of peaks which are not quite the purple monkshood,
not quite the crusty, papillated surface inside an alien geode.
Consider this odd yield: overgrown berry with its easy sway
and pubescent peel, how it will proffer its redolent fruit.
This mysterious being now enters you: to arms, to arms.
COLLEGE CITY MARKET, COLLEGE CITY, CA
When you come to a fork in the road, you've reached the limit
of inhabited space. That goes for most points on the compass,
leastways true north. And it is true, the pavement that splits
the difference, offers you half its lean sandwich, sanderlings,
stink bugs. When you just can't drive: offers you a pallet.
The register sticks. The swatter will not nearly vanquish its prey.
Bursts its lid in geyser spray, a jar of pickled pork rinds.
Eats its way through tin, the green chile salsa called verde.
Dies one afternoon, the rat who had nibbled too much cereal;
and, though his location is vague, you can smell him decay,
up through floorboards wafting. Light a candle then blow it out.
When a customer wrinkles his nose, just look the other way.
Grasshoppers pitch themselves against the wire front door.
Nothing in the cooler they desire. They don't want flan or beer.
SEVEN SKETCHES FOR A LANDSCAPE, UNFINISHED
1
The state, begun as a series of missions,
used native men & women as cheap labor,
edified through occasional public floggings.
As the indigenous populations began to die,
they were replaced by immigrants from China
used to build railroads,
with pickaxes and blasting caps.
And when the Chinese were too many,
the US Congress passed exclusion acts.
2
In Wheatland, hops pickers, fired upon
by Yuba County sheriffs and their henchmen
for attempting to protect themselves
against exploitation and unsafe working conditions,
retaliated by rioting; were beaten and cuffed.
3
In Cocoran, the Mexican strikers were refused relief.
Some infants starved. Some workers died.
The farmers dumped their milk into the sewers,
and burned acres of corn, rather
than provide for upstart laborers.
4
Old man Nakagawa, divested of his property in 1942,
returned to Marysville following the war
and opened a small grocery.
5
While then-governor Ronald Reagan
stood in the capitol's rose garden,
members of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense
entered the senate chambers,
armed to protect their community
from the abuse of power exhibited by Oakland police.
6
When the Islamic mosque on Tierra Buena Road
was set ablaze by arsonists,
the neighboring Sikhs opened up their temple
as a place of worship
for their historic enemies.
7
The rains still bring the rivers to a crest.
[Here's where you imagine the rest.]
A BRIEF HISTORY OF INTERNMENT
Hence the wild daikon.
We've made the landscape mean here.
And then we put down roots.
THE BATHERS
What a reprieve from all this stultifying heat.
And all the threats implicit in that heat:
the sweep and snare of blackberry,
razor barb of concertina wire.
The bluish teasel nearly chafed you
with its bracts.
You've made it through some muck
with your absolute body
still intact. So far,
the Camp Far West lakewater is barely blue.
That might make two of you.
Who is the other whom you seek?
They found a body in this lake; it wasn't his;
it wasn't yours. And so the shore
persists in summoning you.
He may be waiting.
His body hasn't lost any allure.
& nor has yours.
But sorry is the heart
that knows
what's round the bend.
LITTLE BOY BLUE
He finds himself inside the Sunrise Mall,
but not at Waldenbooks. He seeks no solitude.
His second great awakening has started,
subdued interstices between kiosks and stores;
the proximity of skimming eyes, or studious eyes
that read him like a copy of Leaves of Grass.
He has come in his holey, worn-out jeans.
He has come there in his flimsy little thongs.
And there's those hankering eyes that seem
to sample him like Orange Julius eggwhite froth
or bits of free salami cubed upon a paper plate
& stabbed by frill-picks.
Don't meet those eyes.
The arcade's packed with Pac-Man players in a jiff.
Gobble the cherries. Gobble that consecrated ghost.
DYING IN THE DEVELOPMENT
Sometimes the odd half acre with a precipitous grade
can be remedied with a dry-laid retaining wall
instead of having to backhoe cut and fill.
Finding ways to stop erosion should be easy
before partition, before the open slope's divided.
Such is the innocuous nature of topography,
before the Whatzits move in with their impudent kid,
the Doughboy pool depreciates the terrace's integrity
or, down the street, a Taco Bell and KFC
merge as one fantastical beast with crispy wings.
We shall not all sleep but we shall all be changed.
I think the awful family's name was actually White.
I did the sleepover there: burn-outs in black tees,
their bodies beginning to prosper, pelotage whorled out
into dark cowlicks, mildly offensive-smelling flowers
bunched in the night, then untucking as we rose
to the morning's listless mother, the fest of sausages
and toaster waffles, milk moustaches,
"the carton says homo," "homo? sick," and belching.
Just don't serve me no Tang, I thought.
I hated the taste of Tang.
Unsurprising what gets blocked out, reapportioned.
I say it was a rustic place, but in transition.
I say the land was sculpted,
but it was simply held back. "Held back,"
said of the White boy. Denied promotion to the tenth.
And as the grade remained the same, he worsened.
Continuation school. Vocational Ed. Juvenile detention.
The property values rose slightly; then depreciated.
The retaining walls declined in their integrity.
Not the fault of anyone, really. It was a lean half acre.
It was a mean development, no outlet,
no opportunity, except the kind that came tooling
up the street in a Vega, playing Ecstasy Passion & Pain.
I realize this might read solely as an allegory:
the peregrines that hovered there,
the Mormons and recruiters and the suck-ass school,
Vice-Principal Pervy who would paddle young behinds.
But that's not only striped resurfacing.
It's the entire slipshod construction: a site where
everything happened gradually;
it was so gradual, it was practically overnight.
CHICKEN
The metallic taste I got from being served upon a tray
in the Sac County Jail, or bumped against
the dented cans at the Dented Can Warehouse.
The stale scent, the elbow scrapes: I was a billiard ball
for those who cared to knock me in the pockets
on the table in The Wreck Room afterhours.
It wasn't only Amtrak pulling trains each night.
Each man who lost his stake in me had lost
his gamecock, his bathhouse boychick,
the pullet at the pumphouse, the tipsy one, free-living.
The cues were often skewed. When simple coxcombs
preened, I wasn't squeamish on their knees
as, without means, I groomed their inch-long wattles.
I'm getting on in years. I'm past my freshness date.
If I have balked at play, it's that this chicken
tastes no more like table fowl. I blame the microwaves.
You blame the chemicals and drugs. Yes, I'm a little overdone,
I'll warrant you. You want a little cut. Get in here, then,
pull back the skin and crisp it,
before the insatiate drunks come round with greasy fingers,
distribute me between the bars, and pinch my biscuits.
BOJANGLES
You've gone and gotten cozy with the doorman;
he's so smitten, he's ready to lose his job.
How did you get here, he wants to know.
You go all kitten in his lap. You're almost genuine.
Once you're in, who cares if you've blown your cover.
You've got to put on the outfit that says:
I don't want to fuck you. I just want to dance.
But also: meet me in the parking lot with some blow.
To the outskirts of Tooterville you go—
(nobody holds a gun to your head.
Nobody beats you with a length of hose.
You're cute when you're young and cute.
Now wipe those lips. Now wipe that runny nose.)
—with a little white slut.
DYING IN A TURKISH BATH
Remind me to tell you about the sculpted figures
an eye can devour, the imperfect laws of gravity
and the imperfect ceiling, the hot stone floors.
Someone's pressing against me in the steam, again.
I want to make sure it's you who's ravishing
in the lead-white pools, the salty declivities.
I expect we'll both harden like old bread. I expect
we'll have seen each hoodlum and attendant
to the point we'll naturally shrink away. We will
have had so many good figs and the green grapes.
So much soap, we'll have stung our tender openings.
Bearing against one another, in the opaque spray.
END OF DAYS
I have seen a hawk owl's shadow across the street.
That doesn't mean that I have seen a hawk owl.
He could join with me in the perfect guise of a bird.
Wild forms are with us always, though fleeting.
There are no particular things to make me love anyone,
least of all, not you.
On the wings of that great speckled bird.
THAT'S WHERE THEY HIDE THE SILOS
Did the vast slope bear flax
and cheat all summer?
Fill me in. I haven't the heart
to make myself a study in the grass.
Unlikely to climb the broad stone fences.
Unlikely to improve. Fodder easily gained
might not provide for—us, ungainly quail.
Proceed toward the blinds.
You'll hear the report, later.
You'll think, just take your limit
this time, you'll think
the failsafe dawn breaks
soon enough
and treacherous is the road.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Useless Landscape, or by D. A. Powell. Copyright © 2012 D. A. Powell. Excerpted by permission of Graywolf Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Table of Contents
Contents
Almonds in Bloom....................5Tender Mercies....................6
Cherry Blossoms in Spring....................8
The Fluffer Talks of Eternity....................9
Landscape with Sections of Aqueduct....................10
Useless Landscape....................11
Bidwell Park....................12
The Kiwi Comes to Gridley, CA....................13
College City Market, College City, CA....................14
Seven Sketches for a Landscape, Unfinished....................15
A Brief History of Internment....................18
The Bathers....................19
Little Boy Blue....................20
Dying in the Development....................21
Chicken....................23
Bojangles....................24
Dying in a Turkish Bath....................25
End of Days....................26
That's Where They Hide the Silos....................27
Panic in the Year Zero....................28
Landscape with Temple, Mosque and Little Crosses....................32
Landscape with Combine....................33
Quarantine....................34
Release the Sterile Moths....................35
Valley of the Dolls....................36
Landscape with Figures Partially Erased....................37
Homesickness....................39
Bugcatching at Twilight....................41
Head Out on the Highway....................43
Tarnished Angel....................44
Riverfront Park, Marysville, CA....................45
Love Hangover....................46
Landscape with Lymphatic System, System of Rivulets, System of Rivers....................47
An Elegy for My Libido....................49
Abandonment under the Walnut Tree....................50
The Price of Funk in Funkytown....................51
Traveling Light....................52
Outside Thermalito....................55
The Opening of the Cosmos....................56
One Thousand and One Nights....................57
Funkytown: Forgotten City of the Plain....................59
Notes of a Native Son....................61
Donkey Basketball Diaries....................62
A Little Less Kettledrum, Please....................64
Narcissus....................66
My Life as a Dog....................67
A Guide for Boys....................68
Boonies....................70
Lessons in Woodworking....................72
Pupil....................74
Elements of a Cross-Country Runner....................75
Magic Kingdom Come....................76
Space Junk....................77
Sporting Life....................78
Dying in a Fallow....................79
Reaching Around for You....................80
Goodbye, My Fancy....................81
Hereafter....................83
Midnight Cowbell....................84
Do the Hustle....................85
Once and Future Houseboy....................86
Backdrop with Splashes of Cum on It....................87
Transit of Mercury....................89
Platelet Count Descending....................90
Backstage Pass....................91
Having a Rambutan with You....................92
Summer of My Bone Density Test....................94
The Great Unrest....................96
Orchard in January....................98
Ode to Joy....................99
Missionary Man....................101
Mass for Pentecost: Canticle for Birds & Waters....................104