A
Massey poem is a revelation of place.
Stephen Burt, The
New York Times
Massey
is among the most topographically responsive of modern American
poets. In a book of, in the main, very short poems he offers a series
of compelling meditations on being, dwelling, landscape, and
form.
David Wheatley, Times
Literary Supplement
Illocality is
a rare specimen in contemporary poetry, where the din of loud,
sometimes unnecessarily experimental work can drown out such a quiet
and contained voice. These poems are subtle, but sharp. Their formal
precision—so nimble on the page—gives way to a rigorous thematic
investigation into the nature of intellect itself.
John
James, Colorado
Review
“No
ideas/ but in parking lots,” writes Massey in his fourth collection
as he picks up where 2014’s To
Keep Time leaves
off, this time invoking the specter of William Carlos Williams. He
pays close attention to his immediate surroundings, in poems built
with a keen ear and in sparse lines that appear luminous on the open
space of the page.
If
you aren’t reading Joseph Massey, you should be. Itself a fresh
start, this new book is a good place to begin. Most poets’ body of
work presents a worldview. His is a world.
Ron Stanton, Entropy
Magazine
Nature,
reinvented. An abundance of sound. Nimbly drawn images. The poetry of
the environment. Massey gives us all of this, as he allows his poems
to enter the world nearly naked, wearing only the moment itself.
Ann
van Buren, The
Rumpus
Illocality offers
expertly executed poems that stitch scene to thought in a way that
gives body to the voice of the poet, that imbues the occasions and
locations of the poems with a very physical sense of consciousness,
one working, line-by-line, to understand, to be a part of the world.
These are austere poems in their feel, but they are rich in
maneuvers, and their meditations leave the reader in a deeply
satisfied, mindfully mindless, state.
Ryo Yamaguchi, NewPages
[Massey’s]
minimalism allows words themselves to come forward in new ways, like
workhorses happily unhitched from their harnesses, no longer obliged
to convey human meaning from one place to another.
Justin
Quinn, The
Poetry Society
Minimalist
in nature, there is not much of the personal voice in these poems.
Mostly, there is seeing. With little presence of an “I” that
calls attention to itself, the words themselves seem to take on the
dress of animation. Sometimes the words click. Sometimes they snake
or fold. Sometimes they pause to breathe. Massey writes, It
must be enough/ to live in the variations/ of wind alone./ To sing
the seams. In
reading these poems, I can begin to believe it.
Elisabeth
Whitehead, Tarpaulin
Sky
One
of Massey’s achievements is his ability to use the language of
language, the language of poetry itself to refer, or at least gesture
to, the world — for example, “watching the lines / that cross,
that stain and form a field” or “In the indent of / a day /
wagging / ferns […]” — so that his poetry foregrounds a
capacity to perform a self-reflexive examination. That is, it refers
to the real world, but it is also self-conscious about the way in
which the poem is making that real world in poetry.
Jon
Thompson, Free
Verse
Selected
reviews of To
Keep Time
Massey
sketches the visible (clouds in the sky, power lines that “suspend
a crow—/ sliver of cellophane/ cinched in its beak”) and
obsessively documents sound in a manner only the most acutely
perceptive listeners could match. “As long as blood runs/ the
body,/ there is no silence,” he observes with a hint of foreboding.
At certain points, he departs from his observations of the aural and
the visible, struggling to reach for some insight into the stillness
before it “re-/ coils into noise” and is drowned out in the loud
racket of the mind. These moments of vulnerability blur the lines
between Massey’s inner anxiety and the calm of the immediate
environment, providing an element of fragility and sophistication to
his small, glinting pieces.
Massey
puts into practice a great solution: his poems about cloud and
seacoast, storefront and windowsill, ask you to look for ironies,
overtones, and phenomenological claims in their own sounds, and to do
so with the same care that the poems afford in their aggressively
minimal scenes. Each word rewards sustained, minute
attention.
Stephen Burt, The
Believer
In
distilled, acutely observed poems, Massey builds the world out of
light and shadow; he helps us see pattern and grid, the thinning
sunlight, “slow/ flowering/ of form flowering/ out of form.”
Remarkably, and important to his poetry, he also helps us hear sound
and even its absence: “As long as blood runs/ the body,/ there is
no silence.// Silence hums.” Here, exterior and interior are
continuous; the physical world touches us as “Inward/ a world//
accumulates.” You can’t call this nature poetry, but it’s a
beautiful rendition of what’s breathable.
Barbara
Hoffert, Library
Journal
Joseph
Massey’s collection of fierce minimalistic observations contain a
cascading effect, where the velocity of the word-sounds build
anticipation yet stall with a density of ideas.
Evan Karp, SF
Weekly
Massey’s
work is often characterized by its stillness, its steady placidity.
But these are not poems of quietism. The pieces in To Keep Time are
full of organic density, vibrating with some unknowable animation. As
muffled and muted as they sometimes seem in all their meditative
glory, these poems still speak affirmatively of the tactile pleasure
of the world in nature, in the senses, and in language—and then
there’s more.
Housten Donham, The
Volta Blog
To
Keep Time appears to revel in non-specificity, with Massey going so
far as to gloss a particular bit of flora as only “some sprawling
pastel plant / I still don’t know the name of.” Even those
animals and plants that are specifically identified aren’t peculiar
to place. Hummingbirds can be found throughout North America; oaks
and ravens would be as much at home in a Japanese or an Irish poem as
an American one. But these obliquely fitful poems are, as the book’s
title implies, not about place, but time—waiting through it,
weighting it, as the speaker keeps watch over his internal seasons.
Detailed geographies would be beside the point.
Maureen
Thorson, Open
Letters Monthly
Massey
is a latter-day Anchorite, abstracted salutarily from our
distractions. He mocks himself for this – it’s not enough to live
in a world like the one his book describes – but a soujourn there
healthily alerts us to the other world we live in, one we mostly
overlook but will always be there waiting for us.
Justin
Quinn, Body
Literature
These
are poems wrenched with the desire to represent the strange
commingling of voice and silence, sight and texture, meaning and
meaninglessness. They are poems poised excruciatingly between “not
enough” and “too much” – poems that proceed, therefore, with
an artful fear or distrust of the lyric impulse, as if in singing too
much they would misrepresent the shadowy brooding mood out of which
the poems take flight.
Andrew Field, Jerry
Magazine
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