Suns
Tim WrightSuns
🌐🌐🌐 This first full-length volume draws from poems written over roughly ten years: prose sequences, sonnets or thereabouts, parody-homages, a metro poem, psychical collaborations, and drawn from small-print chapbooks. Combining a condensed lyricism, collage, and durational procedures, the collection works its way through days and the everyday (near accidents, a working salad, the assumptions of architecture)...The sense of fleeting glimpse, of provisionality, of actual sense-data taken in but not yet possessed, is terrific. Is it lyric Well, yes—but with a stylistic affiliation to Projective and subsequent aesthetics. And no—in the sense that Wright does not seek that laurel or that identification.The feeling given is of a spacey self-awareness. So many lines in these poems seem acts of orientation, verification of the subjects placement, vis-a-vis sounds, views, examinations—of the sky, of overhead wires, a bird, sounds of a nearby train or traffic, changes in the weather. A space both actual and mental.Ken Bolton, SoutherlyTim Wright is the author of The nights live changes (2014) and Weekends end (2013).