Spirit Vessels: By Dennis
Formento: Foothills Publishing, 2018, 78 pages. ISBN: 978-0-921053-27-9.
Spirit Vessels is the first
chapbook that I’ve read from Dennis Formento, who lives in Slidell, Louisiana
and is active in the local poetry community here. I’ve not met him personally
but was interested in reading some of his work since I’ve heard good things
about it from other local poets.
Spirit Vessels is Formento’s
most recent collection and is a substantial work. The poems are free form and
often leap from image to image. Some words that occurred to me frequently as I
read through the pieces here were “jazz” and “improvisation.” A few pieces
struck me as having surrealistic elements, but many more are what I would call
“nature” poems. Local Louisiana elements are common but expand far beyond the
usual swamps and gators. And there are plenty of references to natural
environments outside of Louisiana. Most of this “nature” material is not pretty nature but reflects the damage
done by pollution, coastal erosion, and climate change. These are not, for the
most part, happy poems, but they present a realistic, if dramatic, view of the
changing world environment.
I
don’t want to suggest that such nature poems make up the entirety of the
collection. There is plenty of variety here. But it was these pieces, such as
“Water,” “Poem: ‘Useless’” and “Bayou Paddle,” that were the most memorable and
effective to me. If you'd like to purchase a copy of the book, the publisher's site is here:
There
are at least two more collections by Formento that I know of, Looking For An Out Place, and Cineplex. I’ve got copies of both of
these and since I certainly enjoyed Spirit
Vessels very much I’ll be looking forward to reading and reviewing these as
well.
3 comments:
I do enjoy discovering new local poets. Good review.
www.thepulpitandthepen.com
Thank You, Charles
That's cool that you have a local poetry community there. We have a local Antifa community here ;0
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