This is a little, self-published, 24 page book of poetry by the Huntington, West Virginia poets Edwina "Eddy" Pendarvis and Harry Geig. Eddy is a professor emeritus from Marshall University and her partner, the late Harry Geig, retired from the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Eddy and I have been friends for several years and, sadly, I never knew Harry. Both were widely known, at least in Appalachian and West Virginia poetry circles for the quality of their writing. While I would not clearly classify everything in this little book as love poems it is constructed and published with love and strong emotions based in a relationship which lasted literally to the day of Harry's death. My one objection to the book, and one I have had with other multi-authored books of poetry is that the individual poems are not labeled as to specific author. But this is a really nice little book of which I had known for several years but had never been able to locate a copy until recently. The book was published under the company name Shoestring Publications, Lavalette, West Virginia, and was no doubt done in a very small press run of no more than a thousand copies based on how rarely it ever appears for sale on used book websites. Since the only Shoestring Publications I can locate on the internet has a Maine land line number, I suspect this book was not done by that company and was, instead, a single effort with a private printer and the authors.
As I said in my first few sentences, both Edwina Pendarvis and Harry Geig have been recognized as serious and high quality poets in Appalachia and West Virginia for quite a few years. The book is filled to overflowing with high quality poetry and is remarkably consistent in tone and flow for a book with multiple authors. I have previously read works by both authors and each has always had a unique style in my opinion. I believe I can sometimes discern which of the two wrote a particular poem but not always. Harry's poetry tends to flow like scat music, street talk, and is usually about human interactions in an urban environment. Eddy Pendarvis' poetry often has a more rural, less edgy quality to it. But I won't bother you my guesses as to which author wrote which poems in the book. Instead, let's talk about some of my favorite poems and lines in this little jewel.
The poem "Come and See" opens and closes with some finely chosen words which clearly show the love with which they were written:
When a long-dead comet un-named
showered us with an after-image of meteors
I went with you to a hilltop
to watch you
.....
Whenever wherever
eye-bright fireworks rise and die
in a black
and purple night it's you
it's you I want to see
That opening and closing pair of stanzas is what a well-written love poem is all about.
The poem "Soldier" is longer than most in the book and chronicles a sad, end of life story about a strong, effective soldier in his "shiny black Pony-ac Ventura...during the strike (but the assailants are still unidentified)". These couple of lines paint a picture of a strong, effective man in a bad situation who is able to hold his own. But because the poem is an end of life story, we come to the closing lines and find a seventy-two year old man who speaks out about about being robbed "...three kids callin' me pops..." and he "...couldn't do nothin' about it...not a fuckin' thing." That is a strong story about an old man, near death, complaining about his weakness and inability to defend himself.
The next to last poem in the book, "Christmas or Anytime, Honey" is one of the real, heart string tugging love poems which make the book the little jewel it is:
"But listen, If you were dying, I'd save you. I'd stand
at the foot of the bed, challenge Death to his old game, and,
lousy player that I am,
I'd win anyway."
That is just about as strongly poetic a statement of love as I have ever read.
If you can locate a copy of this little jewel somewhere in a used book store, yard sale, online book seller, grab it up, read it, and enjoy it to your heart's content just as I have.
1 comment:
Hi Roger. I'm a native Knott Countian who enjoys your blogs. I'm also a writer and blogger. I write for children and have had 50 books published with another on the way in early 2022. I'm interested in visiting your blog, via an interview, to discuss my book, Bugs on the Job, and about life in Appalachia in February or March, 2022. I'd also love to have you visit my blog, Nancy Kelly Allen Writing Workshop, to discuss your book or Appalachia, or both.
Thank you and have a great day.
Nancy
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