HCSHR 6:20 - Kelly Sargent, Bookmarks
Review by Dave Read
In her Introduction to her collection Bookmarks,
Kelly Sargent describes the sign language she developed with her “profoundly
deaf” twin sister. Sargent, also born with significant hearing loss,
articulates how “images and meanings merged to create a shared language” that
even their parents did not understand. This background has contributed to
her experience as a poet, and the way she visualizes the world. In particular,
the process of writing haiku and senryu for Sargent “feels like coming
home”. Indeed, a merger of image and meaning can be found in the
short-form poems throughout Bookmarks, Sargent’s debut haiku
collection.
Sargent’s claim that “Bookmarks speaks to
some of life’s defining moments” is proven true page after page. Consider
the following senryu:
second-hand
shop
prom dress
brand new
That the subject of the poem is implicitly poor and
unable to afford a new dress for prom, does not dim her excitement or diminish
the fact that the dress is still “brand new” to her.
Likewise, Sargent is adept at articulating the
various experiences of being a parent. The following two haiku…
strawberry
picking …
a dribble
of sunshine
on my
daughter’s chin
sycamore
shade
my lap has
room
for one
more
…both effectively capture moments with a small
child. The first provides a humorous image of a toddler eating the
strawberries she is meant to gather. The second creates a warm picture of
a child snuggling into her parent. However, Sargent is not naive in her
depiction of parenthood. A few pages later we find:
this year’s
skinned knee
she runs …
to the
coach
As children grow, they learn to take solace in
people other than their parents. Unlike “sycamore shade”, where Sargent’s
daughter seeks comfort from her mother, here, the child, now a little older,
goes to her coach with the injury that resulted from the game.
Bookmarks
also addresses loss in various ways. Divorce and the loss of loved ones
feature in the following haiku:
dandelion
in the
crack —
signing the
divorce papers
wearing
mom’s sweater
her arms
around me
again
Similarly, Sargent is poignant in her collection’s
title poem:
hospice
book cart
bookmarks
between the
pages
Bookmarks
is a strong collection of haiku and senryu. Sargent has written a book
that effectively merges image with meaning in a manner like the sign language
she and her sister developed as children. I would recommend Bookmarks
to all readers of haiku.
return to Haiku Canada return to Book Reviews Home Page HCShoHyōRan
An excellent review, with marvelous quoted poems!
ReplyDelete