HCSHR 4:12 —three mini-chapbooks distributed by bottle rockets press

HCSHR 4:12—three mini-chapbooks: Stanford M. Forrester/ Sekiro, orphan poems, bottle rockets press, 2018. 12 pages, 2 ¾ x 4; Michael Ketchek, rusty backstop, bottle rockets press, 2020. 12 pages, 2 ¾ x 4; Stanford M. Forrester, Staten Island, Nut Wagon Press, 2020. 12 pages, 2 ¾ x 4. Each: 3.50$US to USA, 4.00$US to Canada. 4.50$US to Asia and Europe.  www.bottlerocketspress.com

review by Maxianne Berger

Those who know me well know I have a particular affinity for very little books, a probable holdover from the childhood delights of the miniature Little Little Golden classics. These three mini-chapbooks distributed by bottle rockets press appeal from the get-go for that very reason. And since there are so few poems in each booknine in Michael Ketchek’s, ten each in Stanford M. Forrester’sthey would be selected with care.

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Forrester’s Orphan Poems are likely what the title indicates: there is no common theme beyond the intelligence that informs their making. These two happen to share rain.

Saturday morning rain—
a driving lesson
with my father

all day drizzle . . .
how easy to smudge the ink
of a winter haiku

The cover has a small drawing of a birdhouse hanging from a brancha symbol of home for poems that here deserve one.

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Ketchek’s Rusty Backstop has a little baseball symbol on the covera reverse likeness of this one ⚾and does include several haiku featuring baseball, of which, notably, the title poem.

rusty backstop
the abandoned infield
turning green

Where sports can be a metaphor for dealing with an opponent, there are many variations in these haiku, from survival in nature ... to war ... to survival in war.

candidate’s headquarters
the day after the election
all those silent phones

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The unifying theme to Forrester’s Staten Island would be the dichotomy of presence and absence.

  buddha belly t-shirt
    all the large sizes
           sold out

mia for 20 years . . .
a toy soldier
in the sandbox

The cover, quite properly, features a small photo of the Staten Island Ferry.

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The haiku in these mini-chapbooks will rekindle any fond memories a reader might have of the pleasures of those miniature Little Golden Classics, and will newly charm those whose childhoods didn’t include them.

Maxianne Berger
April 2021

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