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  1. #1

    Default Philip Levine is to be US Poet Laureate

    Detroit born and raised Philip Levine has been nominated to be the next poet laureate:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/10/bo...e.html?_r=1&hp

    Mr. Levine grew up in Detroit, back when it was still a “vital city,” he said. His parents were emigrants from Russia, but for some reason they told him he was of Spanish ancestry ,and as a young man he became fascinated with Spanish anarchism and the Spanish Civil War, which still turn up in his poems. Mr. Levine’s father died when he was 5, leaving the family hard up, and before embracing poetry he held a succession of what he has called “stupid jobs.” He built transmissions for Cadillac, worked in the Chevrolet gear and axle factory, drove a truck for Railway Express. His early poems, often written in narrow, seven-syllable lines, were gritty, hard-nosed evocations of the lives of working people and their neighborhoods.

  2. #2

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    Couldn't happen to better poet or a better person. Phil and his brother went to jr. high school and high school with my mother on the west side, and he was at Wayne with both of my parents. Mom has kept in touch with him a bit over the years and has always bought his books and greatly enjoyed his poetry.

    I've been fortunate enough to meet him a few times, and the phrase 'self-effacing' pretty much describes him to a tee. His brother, a fine writer, artist, and singer in his own right, ran an auto parts business over by Warren and Grand River for many years.

    Even though Phil's lived in Fresno California for a long time now, he still writes often about a set of Detroit experiences that I think most of us would recognize. Here is a the last part of a poem about an old friend that he published a couple of years ago in a book that contains many poems about his recent return trips to the city.

    "Arrival & Departure" [[excerpt)

    There was snow here, too,
    Speckled with cinders, piss yellowed, tired,

    And the smell of iron and ashes blowing

    In from Canada, and you and I waiting

    For a streetcar that finally arrived,

    Jammed with the refuse of the nightshift

    At Plymouth Assembly.


    I should have seen

    Where we were headed; even at twenty

    It was mine to know.


    Like you I thought

    2.35 an hour was money,

    I thought we’d sign on for afternoons and harden

    Into men. Wasn’t that the way it worked,

    Men sold themselves to redeem their lives?

    If there was an answer I didn’t get it.


    Korea
    broke,
    I took off for anywhere

    Living where I could, one perfect season

    In your mountains. The years passed,

    Suddenly I was old and full of new needs.


    When I went back to find you I found
    Instead no one in the old neighborhood
    Who knew who I was asking for, the Sure Shot

    Had become a porno shop; the plating plant

    On Trumbull had moved to Mexico

    Or heaven.


    In its space someone planted

    Oiled grass, stripped-down cars, milkweeds

    Shuddering in the traffic.


    The river was here,

    Still riding low and wrinkled toward a world

    We never guessed was there, but still the same,

    Like you, faithful to the end.


    If your sister,

    Widowed now, should call today and ask

    One more time, “Where is he at?

    I need him, He needs me,” what should I tell her?


    He’s in the wind, he’s under someone’s

    Boot-soles, he’s in the spring grass, he lives

    In us as long as we live.


    She won’t buy it,

    Neither would you.

    You’d light a cigarette,


    Settle your great right hand behind my neck,

    Bow down forehead to forehead, your black hair

    Fallen across your eyes, and mutter something

    Consequential, “bullshit” or “god a-mighty”

    Or “the worst is still to come.”


    You came north

    To Detroit in winter.


    What were you thinking?
    Last edited by EastsideAl; August-10-11 at 07:13 PM.

  3. #3

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    I had never heard of Mr. Levine until the other day...i have fallen in love with his poetry!
    great stuff

    perhaps this could be called ruin poetry


    An Abandoned Factory, Detroit
    The gates are chained, the barbed-wire fencing stands,
    An iron authority against the snow,
    And this grey monument to common sense
    Resists the weather. Fears of idle hands,
    Of protest, men in league, and of the slow
    Corrosion of their minds, still charge this fence.

    Beyond, through broken windows one can see
    Where the great presses paused between their strokes
    And thus remain, in air suspended, caught
    In the sure margin of eternity.
    The cast-iron wheels have stopped; one counts the spokes
    Which movement blurred, the struts inertia fought,

    And estimates the loss of human power,
    Experienced and slow, the loss of years,
    The gradual decay of dignity.
    Men lived within these foundries, hour by hour;
    Nothing they forged outlived the rusted gears
    Which might have served to grind their eulogy

  4. #4

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    I am so excited about this! Thanks for posting some of your favorites, folks -- I hope he does a reading here soon.

  5. #5

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    Here's one of my favorites;

    BELLE ISLE. 1949

    We stripped in the first warm spring night
    and ran down into the Detroit River
    to baptize ourselves in the brine
    of car parts, dead fish, stolen bicycles,
    melted snow. I remember going under
    hand in hand with a Polish highschool girl
    I'd never seen before, and the cries
    our breath made caught at the same time
    on the cold, and rising through the layers
    of darkness into the final moonless atmosphere
    that was this world, the girl breaking
    the surface after me and swimming out
    on the starless waters towards the lights
    of Jefferson Ave. and the stacks
    of the old stove factory unwinking.
    Turning at last to see no island at all
    but a perfect calm dark as far
    as there was sight, and then a light
    and another riding low ahead
    to brings us back home, ore boats maybe. or smokers
    walking alone. Back panting
    to the gray coarse beach we didn't dare
    fall on, the damp piles of clothes,
    and dressing side by side in silence
    to go back where we came from.

  6. #6
    Vox Guest

    Default

    Sometimes it takes a government to bring out treasures like this. I never heard of him, but yet immediately recognized the scene he painted in those three examples.

    I will be seeking out his work now, and happily. Thanks for the post Mike M.
    Last edited by Vox; August-14-11 at 12:29 AM.

  7. #7
    Vox Guest

    Default

    The New World

    A man roams the streets with a basket
    of freestone peaches hollering, "Peaches,
    peaches, yellow freestone peaches for sale."
    My grandfather in his prime could outshout
    the Tigers of Wrath or the factory whistles
    along the river. Hamtramck hungered
    for yellow freestone peaches, downriver
    wakened from a dream of work, Zug Island danced
    into the bright day glad to be alive.
    Full-figured women in their negligees
    streamed into the streets from the dark doorways
    to demand in Polish or Armenian
    the ripened offerings of this new world.
    Josef Prisckulnick out of Dubrovitsa
    to Detroit by way of Ellis Island
    raised himself regally to his full height
    of five feet two and transacted until
    the fruit was gone into those eager hands.
    Thus would there be a letter sent across
    an ocean and a continent, and thus
    would Sadie waken to the news of wealth
    without limit in the bright and distant land,
    and thus bags were packed and she set sail
    for America. Some of this is true.
    The women were gaunt. All day the kids dug
    in the back lots searching for anything.
    The place was Russia with another name.
    Joe was five feet two. Dubrovitsa burned
    to gray ashes the west wind carried off,
    then Rovno went, then the Dnieper turned to dust.
    We sat around the table telling lies
    while the late light filled an empty glass.
    Bread, onions, the smell of burning butter,
    small white potatoes we shared with no one
    because the hour was wrong, the guest was late,
    and this was Michigan in 1928.

  8. #8

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    Same here... never heard of him but have spent the last hour reading his poems online.

    Any suggestions on which of his works one should start with?

  9. #9
    Vox Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by detroiter79 View Post
    Same here... never heard of him but have spent the last hour reading his poems online.

    Any suggestions on which of his works one should start with?
    There's a book, called 5 Detroits, that may be interesting. It's at the library, so maybe while I am there for a meeting I will pick it up Monday.

  10. #10

    Default

    detroiter79 - Try to get hold of a copy of Levine's New Selected Poems 1st ed. 1991. The one I have is a 1997 7th ed. There are selections from 12 of his books starting in 1963 with On The Edge on up to 1988 A Walk With Tom Jefferson. A couple that are cited a lot are What Work Is and The Simple Truth. Latest are The Mercy and News Of The World.

    Here's one from They Feed They Lion;

    COMING HOME, Detroit, 1968

    A winter Tuesday, the city pouring fire,
    Ford Rouge sulfers the sun,Cadillac, Lincoln,
    Chevy gray. The fat stacks
    of breweries hold their tongues. Rags
    papers, hands, the stems of birches
    dirtied with words.

    Near the freeway
    you stop and wonder what came off,
    recall the snowstorm where you lost it all,
    the wolverine, the northern bear, the wolf
    caught out, ice and steel raining
    from the foundries in a shower
    of human breath. On sleds in the false sun
    the new material rests. One brown child
    stares and stares into your frozen eyes
    until the lights change and you go
    forward to work. The charred faces, the eyes
    boarded up, the rubble of innards, the cry
    of wet smoke hanging in your throat,
    the twisted river stopped at the color of iron.
    We burn this city every day.
    Last edited by BRAZZMAN; August-14-11 at 07:40 AM.

  11. #11

    Default

    http://www.npr.org/2011/08/14/139576...absolute-truth

    Levine's work is most famous for its urban perspective, and its depiction of blue-collar life in Detroit. But while he was working in the factories, he found nothing poetic about them.

    "I found the places hateful." His job at Chevrolet Gear and Axle was hard, he says, "and the work was exhausting."
    Even though he was writing poetry at the time, he couldn't bring himself to write about his day job.

    "Even in my imagination I didn't want to spend time where I was working," he says. "I didn't want to talk shop. So no, even after I left — because I left Detroit at age 26 — I was unable to write anything worth keeping about Detroit for years. I wrote things and I threw them away."

    Why was it so hard? Levine quotes another poet laureate, William Wordsworth: "'Poetry is made up of emotion recollected in tranquility.' I didn't have any tranquility," Levine says. "I was full of anger. I was very aware of the fact that I was being exploited and the people around me were being exploited. There was a mythology about us: We were stupid and lazy and we deserved what we were doing, our dumb work."

  12. #12

    Default

    Brazzman,

    Thanks for the suggestions. I was able to find a copy of Levine's New Selected Poems on Amazon. For those like myself yearning to not only know, but feel, what it must have been like to have lived in Detroit at that time, his work from what I've briefly read is truly moving - it's been a long time since I've felt this way reading poetry - his poems are really haunting me to be honest with you - but in an exciting way that makes me look forward to getting the book so I can delve deeper into his words and thoughts.

    Amazon also suggested I purchase "Made in Detroit" by Paul Clemens... wondering if anyone's read it? The reviews of the book are very interesting.

  13. #13

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    I contacted/email John King Used & Rare Books in Detroit a year ago about Philip Levin's books. They sent back a list of several copies that are out of print and on hand in his store. Many 1st and subsequent editions @ $35 +. One is a copy of 5 Detroits, numbered & signed for $395.

    http://www.rarebooklink.com/cgi-bin/...oks/about.html

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