Beautiful Trouble

Beautiful Trouble

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SKU: 9780809325986
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Description

In her first collection of poems, Kansas native Amy Fleury captures images of dragging clotheslines, baked lawns, and sweet potato babies, inserting them with an earnest dignity into her stories of midwestern life. Beautiful Trouble explores the subtleties of landscape, place, families, girlhood, womanhood, and everyday existence on the prairie. Fleury writes of the Midwest with authenticity, speaks of romance with delicate allure, and recalls the heartbreak of childhood without self-pity. In meditations on resilience and life’s contradictions, Fleury engages her characters fully and paints their souls and sensations evenly in language both rare and beautiful. She is a poet in love with sound and its power to summon majesty from quotidian scenes. Her poems are brief and striking, depending on exquisite word choice and balance to achieve a simple order on the page.

A native of rural northeast Kansas, Amy Fleury earned an M.F.A. from McNeese State University and has held the Nadya Aisenberg Fellowship at the MacDowell Colony. Her poetry and fiction have appeared in numerous journals, including Southern Poetry Review, North American Review, 21st, Laurel Review, South Dakota Review, and Prairie Schooner. She is an associate professor of English at Washburn University and the managing editor of Woodley Memorial Press in Topeka, Kansas.
The poem delineates a long list of “reasons” why things are going wrong. The ending, however, is quintessential John Brehm-surprising us with how accurately he’s pinned down the stuff of daily living. His very informality packs a punch, and if the ending brings us up short, it’s meant to:

And a million reasons hang

upside down like sleeping bats.

For God’s salve don’t disturb them!

Relax. Tell yourself it’s just a bad mood,

that it’ll pass and then return

and pass away again, like

everything else. Like the rain

and fog this morning. Like everything.

At once playful and serious, Sea of Faith remains a collection of singularities, unified by a voice that, like the rain, we will want to hear again-and yet again.

Amy Fleury’s Beautiful Trouble opens on the Kansas plains where she grew up, estab­lishing a perspective from which we can understand its particular passions. “That girl / always a string bean child” will reach puberty, bringing with her the willful self who can thirty-three pages later call out from “Commotions of the Flesh,” saying:

To hell with the mind

and its pursuit of its own

proper good. I am concerned here

with the commotions of the flesh.

Living in the fissure between desire

and the having, I have failed,

failed, failed to control myself.

The voice here is at once intimate and authoritative, determined by that elusive ele­ment we call “tone;’ which in this book is inquisitive and feisty. We’re in the presence of someone who is willing to thumb her nose at the conventional as she honors a life where “there was trouble all around and everywhere little mercies.”

The prairie resides within the poems, acts as backdrop to the smaller dramas that play themselves out on the human stage. Fleury captures the land’s essence in quick watercolor brush strokes-wheel rut, cottonwoods, barbed wire, stubble fields-that move toward the figurative: “gray clods of our dreams;” “days piled like stones lifted / and placed by the side of the field,””the scribbles of twigs / caught in rainspouts.” These, in turn, give way to extended metaphors, exacting in their precision, novel in their approach. And these, in their turn, return to the image, reversing its terms: “sky as stark / as prairie in winter.” In this landscape, emotions stand out in bas relief. Finally, the images hold both person and poem in place: “There was always the rusted water pump / and section of rotted fence. / Always and again something /to keep her?’

Beautiful Troubles is a fully realized book, a female child’s coming of age-the very title names the tensions, coming as it does from a poem entitled “The Fugitive Eve,” linking yet again a curious mind and the body’s desires. “Pink” moves from a rejection of ruffles into a world where, come spring, there are “brash azaleas / and bright zinnias blazing.” “Blaze” might be a good word for what these poems do as they ignite the kindling of place and explore the more explosive mix of emotions. “Wher­ever the Dancing Is Done” states it this way:

But I am bound to this place,

wherever the dancing is done,

left with the wish

to be easy inmy bodyand the clumsy belief

in flung arms and these dirty feet.

To be easy in the body, to be at ease with its turbulence-the poet probes that haunt­ing underside of the poems at every opportunity and from every angle. It becomes a quest, culminating in a moment when the poet sees evidence of such ease in the natural world. Still, the mind will insist itself, and “Nemaha County Nocturne” weds place with grammar, even as it follows its rumbling is into the quieter landscape of 1, the lines paring themselves down to one muted repetition:

The difficult stars parse the night into silence,benediction, dream. Between soil and silo thrums the grammar of grain and all of Kansas rests.

The slender roots of weeds suck at the dirt,and the listing windmills and ruined barnslean toward their beginnings. Flowing north,

our river glides through glacial cutsand those ghosts of primitive sea. A turtle, overturned dish

of flesh and patience, swims against history’s blur. Locusts resurrect

the wind and withreluctant tongues we name it

holy holy.

From this point on, the book’s tone shifts somewhat, becomes more quietly contemplative. Many of the poems are quite short-brieflyric impressions that capture a moment of being. Often, though, they arrive at an insight so keen it stays with you. One such moment occurs in “Elegy for the Living.” There is grieving for the not-yet­dead, and it takes place over time and is not often expressed. The final two lines of this poem, however, express it for us:

Absence has its own life.

We listen when it speaks.

Fleury shapes such wisdom almost seamlessly; it arises from her material and her imagery, but it surprises us with its simple intelligence. She seems to move gracefully to places poets like William Stafford came to as well, and it may be no accident that they share the shaping lessons of the Kansas plains. But Amy Fleury’s poems have a hotter vein, a sexual fervor that smolders, leading her from her first “whiskey kiss” to the opening of “Burning Back”:

Once I was a girl with a truck

and a tackle box full of jigs and treble hooks.

We sat on my tailgate to watch pasture scorch,

and he traced my bones-hip, thigh, shin.

Burning back the grass becomes the process of the poems themselves, so that like the poet, standing “at this edge of fallow field;’ they seem to be knowingly on the brink: “Like a brittle weed I want to know again / the prairie’s need to burn and burn:’ The poems of Beautiful Trouble enrich the fields, burning themselves into both mind and heart.

“Amy Fleury’s Beautiful Trouble sips ‘thimbles of sunshine,’ feeds ‘honey-rimmed on the mouths of men,’ feels ‘the itch of fire,’ and wants ‘a sweet potato baby.’ These are troubles beautiful as plain days distilled to the wonder seed.”

—Kim Stafford, author of The Muses Among Us: Eloquent Listening and Other Pleasures of the Writer’s Craft
“The minute I finished Beautiful Trouble, I wished I had copies to give to all my friends: To the poets, of course, who will admire it for its art, but also to those who don’t read poetry. Fleury proves that a book of poems need not be baffling or condescending or self-absorbed. With ordinary words placed with perfect precision, this book throws open dozens of windows onto fresh new ways of seeing, and loving, the world.”—Ted Kooser, author of Local Wonders: Seasons in the Bohemian Alps
“Like the persona in her poem ‘When the Dancing is Done,’ Amy Fleury’s poems ‘whirl and wheel’ in a mesmerizing joyful abandon of assonance and alliteration. These are tender poems full of harsh beauty and compassion giving the reader a world both ‘blighted and blessed,’ where there is ‘trouble all around and everywhere little mercies.’ Fleury is a ‘pilgrim from the plains’ sailing into the ‘beautiful trouble/of this world,’ bringing with her a rare and magical sensibility, a lyric intensity that is nearly hypnotic and wondrous love of the sheer beauty and joy of language.”—Judy Jordan, author of Carolina Ghost Woods
The poem delineates a long list of “reasons” why things are going wrong. The ending, however, is quintessential John Brehm-surprising us with how accurately he’s pinned down the stuff of daily living. His very informality packs a punch, and if the ending brings us up short, it’s meant to:

And a million reasons hang

upside down like sleeping bats.

For God’s salve don’t disturb them!

Relax. Tell yourself it’s just a bad mood,

that it’ll pass and then return

and pass away again, like

everything else. Like the rain

and fog this morning. Like everything.

At once playful and serious, Sea of Faith remains a collection of singularities, unified by a voice that, like the rain, we will want to hear again-and yet again.

Amy Fleury’s Beautiful Trouble opens on the Kansas plains where she grew up, estab­lishing a perspective from which we can understand its particular passions. “That girl / always a string bean child” will reach puberty, bringing with her the willful self who can thirty-three pages later call out from “Commotions of the Flesh,” saying:

To hell with the mind

and its pursuit of its own

proper good. I am concerned here

with the commotions of the flesh.

Living in the fissure between desire

and the having, I have failed,

failed, failed to control myself.

The voice here is at once intimate and authoritative, determined by that elusive ele­ment we call “tone;’ which in this book is inquisitive and feisty. We’re in the presence of someone who is willing to thumb her nose at the conventional as she honors a life where “there was trouble all around and everywhere little mercies.”

The prairie resides within the poems, acts as backdrop to the smaller dramas that play themselves out on the human stage. Fleury captures the land’s essence in quick watercolor brush strokes-wheel rut, cottonwoods, barbed wire, stubble fields-that move toward the figurative: “gray clods of our dreams;” “days piled like stones lifted / and placed by the side of the field,” “the scribbles of twigs / caught in rainspouts.” These, in turn, give way to extended metaphors, exacting in their precision, novel in their approach. And these, in their turn, return to the image, reversing its terms: “sky as stark / as prairie in winter.” In this landscape, emotions stand out in bas relief. Finally, the images hold both person and poem in place: “There was always the rusted water pump / and section of rotted fence. / Always and again something /to keep her?’

Beautiful Troubles is a fully realized book, a female child’s coming of age-the very title names the tensions, coming as it does from a poem entitled “The Fugitive Eve,” linking yet again a curious mind and the body’s desires. “Pink” moves from a rejection of ruffles into a world where, come spring, there are “brash azaleas / and bright zinnias blazing.” “Blaze” might be a good word for what these poems do as they ignite the kindling of place and explore the more explosive mix of emotions. “Wher­ever the Dancing Is Done” states it this way:

But I am bound to this place,

wherever the dancing is done,

left with the wish

to be easy in my body and the clumsy belief

in flung arms and these dirty feet.

To be easy in the body, to be at ease with its turbulence-the poet probes that haunt­ing underside of the poems at every opportunity and from every angle. It becomes a quest, culminating in a moment when the poet sees evidence of such ease in the natural world. Still, the mind will insist itself, and “Nemaha County Nocturne” weds place with grammar, even as it follows its rumbling is into the quieter landscape of 1, the lines paring themselves down to one muted repetition:

The difficult stars parse the night into silence, benediction, dream. Between soil and silo thrums the grammar of grain and all of Kansas rests.

The slender roots of weeds suck at the dirt, and the listing windmills and ruined barns lean toward their beginnings. Flowing north,

our river glides through glacial cuts and those ghosts of primitive sea. A turtle, overturned dish

of flesh and patience, swims against history’s blur. Locusts resurrect

the wind and with reluctant tongues we name it

holy holy.

From this point on, the book’s tone shifts somewhat, becomes more quietly contemplative. Many of the poems are quite short-brieflyric impressions that capture a moment of being. Often, though, they arrive at an insight so keen it stays with you. One such moment occurs in “Elegy for the Living.” There is grieving for the not-yet­dead, and it takes place over time and is not often expressed. The final two lines of this poem, however, express it for us:

Absence has its own life.

We listen when it speaks.

Fleury shapes such wisdom almost seamlessly; it arises from her material and her imagery, but it surprises us with its simple intelligence. She seems to move gracefully to places poets like William Stafford came to as well, and it may be no accident that they share the shaping lessons of the Kansas plains. But Amy Fleury’s poems have a hotter vein, a sexual fervor that smolders, leading her from her first “whiskey kiss” to the opening of “Burning Back”:

Once I was a girl with a truck

and a tackle box full of jigs and treble hooks.

We sat on my tailgate to watch pasture scorch,

and he traced my bones-hip, thigh, shin.

Burning back the grass becomes the process of the poems themselves, so that like the poet, standing “at this edge of fallow field;’ they seem to be knowingly on the brink: “Like a brittle weed I want to know again / the prairie’s need to burn and burn:’ The poems of Beautiful Trouble enrich the fields, burning themselves into both mind and heart.

Additional information

Dimensions 1 × 6 × 9 in