THE FORTUNATE ISLANDS
 The Fortunate Islands

Susan Kelly-DeWitt

Paperback - April 2008
84 Pages
ISBN: 978-0-9712676-6-4
USD $14.95 + Shipping

Buy Now


About the Author, Susan Kelly-DeWitt

Susan Kelly-DeWittSusan Kelly-DeWitt is the author of six chapbooks: A Camellia for Judy (Frith Press, 1998), Feather's Hand (Swan Scythe Press, 2000), To a Small Moth (Poet's Corner Press, 2001), Susan Kelly-DeWitt's Greatest Hits (Pudding House, 2003), The Land (Rattlesnake Press, 2005 ), and Cassiopeia Under the Banyan Tree (forthcoming, September 2007), as well as a letterpress collection, The Book of Insects (Spruce Street Press, 2003). Her work has been included in national and regional anthologies such as Claiming the Spirit Within (Beacon Press), I’ve Always Meant To Tell You, Letters to our Mothers (Pocket Books), Things I Never Said, An Anthology of Letters to Fathers (Story Line Press), O Taste and See (Bottom Dog Press) and Highway 99 (Heyday Books), and Words and Quilts (Quilt Digest Press, 1996); her poems have appeared in Poetry, Prairie Schooner, New Letters, North American Review, Rosebud, Cutbank, Nimrod, Women’s Studies Quarterly, Iris, Comstock Review, Oxymoron, Yankee, Runes, Poet Lore, Smartish Pace, Poetry Southeast, Cimarron Review, Spoon River Quarterly, Hawaii Review and Passages North, among many others. Her short story “The Audience” is forthcoming as an illustrated chapbook (Spring 2007) from Uptown Books. She has been the recipient of a Wallace Stegner Fellowship from Stanford University and has won a number of awards, including The Chicago Literary Award from Another Chicago Magazine, the Bazanella Award for Short Fiction and a number of Pushcart nominations. Her essays, interviews, reviews and creative non-fiction have appeared in Poetry Now, Small Press Review, Perihelion and Gardening at a Deeper Level (Garden House Press, 2004). She is currently a part-time instructor for Sacramento City College and the University of California, Davis Extension. The Fortunate Islands is her first full-length collection of poetry.
 

Video



Reviews

"These poems are sure-footed, engaging, broad in subject matter but grounded in the poet's wary detective-mind. I have a strong feeling for the most "psychological" of the poems, and those with psychological twists in the last stanza. The poems in this collection feel emotionally complete. An irresistible reading experience and revelation. Fortunate Arrival!"  - Sandra McPherson, author of The God of Indeterminacy

The Great American Pinup
Susan Kelly-DeWitt’s first full-length book is glossed by a quote from Dava Sobel in reference to the Roman Egyptian mathematician, Ptolemy, who was “free to lay his prime meridian, the zero-degree longitude line, wherever he liked. He chose to run it through the Fortunate Islands…” With this kind of an epigraph, I had expected Kelly-DeWitt to expose her own longitudinal line in the guise of her spiritual philosophy, or the path that her life has wandered. The blurbs on the back cover of her book also presuppose issues of a tough childhood, father-issues, and a deeply impacted voice.
Read more...

 

Comments (1)add comment

a guest said:

http://wdsreviewofbooks.webdelsol.com/Dewitt.html

The Fortunate Islands by Susan Kelly-DeWitt
Reviewed by Shawn Pittard



"At the center / of my being / an inner eye / bled open." Susan Kelly-DeWitt's inner eye is an eye of compassion and close observation. In her newest collection, The Fortunate Islands (Marick Press 2007), Kelly De-Witt's poems arise from memory, landscape, art, the great mysteries, and hope.

As much a naturalist as she is a humanist, Kelly-DeWitt poses provocative questions throughout this collection. In " The Trees," she asks: "Who is to say / the trees aren't frightened too / waiting in the cold in the dark." She asks us to consider the prison guard's arrival in "Waiting for Garcia," asking, "How not to see him as God-like when he comes, / with boots, billy club, handcuffs, gun?"

The Fortunate Islands is an especially well-arranged collection of poems. The book is organized into five parts. Part II, "Whiskey Nights," is the most narrative and provides a family history that resonates in poems throughout the book. This is one way the parts correspond with each other. They also correspond through shared imagery and diction, and Kelly DeWitt's unique and personal voice.

The poems about childhood's terrors are the most "confessional" and bring to mind James Dickey's remarks about Jack Gilbert's poems. Dickey wrote that Gilbert "takes himself away to a place more inward than is safe to go; from that awful silence and tightening, he returns to us poems of savage compassion." Kelly DeWitt's "Whiskey Nights" is clearly a poem of "savage compassion."


WHISKEY NIGHTS

He was still human
but he grew guttural and cruel.

Even asleep
he would trash at us and howl
like a wounded animal.

What was it that tore
his insides?

Once he wrapped himself
in an electric blanket, plugged it in
and stretched out on the grass
"to watch the stars."

We prayed he would
electrocute himself.

(Dear God, those howls — )

Those were our moonless nights,
love at such low tide we felt death
was the only possible future.

When the priest offered
the blessing at the funeral, I saw
a light in the shape of a man rise
out of his coffin and walk
soberly toward me.


An accomplished painter herself, Kelly-DeWitt also looks to visual art for inspiration. She often enters a painting empathetically. For example, she begins "Nuptial" by writing, "I recognize the look of dislocation / I wore in my early twenties" in the woman she describes in an Edward Hopper painting. Other times she enters through knowledge of an artist's work. In "Odalisque," she imagines Matisse, who thinks of his model's body in terms of the pears he will paint tomorrow. Those pears, in turn, are described in human terms, as "a tilted harem." Her most exciting ekphrastic poem is "Red Hills and Bone." A Georgia O'Keefe painting summons a nightmare scene in a restaurant, where a family is humiliated by the father's outburst of rage. Here, the reader hears the relentless echo of "Whiskey Nights." It is in "To Van Gogh: A Confession," though, that the depth of her humanity is realized through a hypothetical mea culpa.


TO VAN GOGH: A CONFESSION

I too might have despised you —
found you smelly, uncouth
and your paintings garish.

I might have passed you by
on a country road and laughed
at your raveled straw hat,

your ravenous eyes.
I might have joked with the others
about the crazy, the lunatic

colors — wild sunflower
yellow, petals dripping
like wax from your ignited

fingers. I might barely have noticed
your carefully arranged
patience, the paint box

on fire, you like an écorché
in a corner of landscape
at the edge of a saffron field.

The poem that follows "To Van Gogh" provides another example of how well the The Fortunate Islands is arranged. The poem is titled "Writing Class" and it takes us into a prison where Joseph, an inmate, "presents me / with a small arrangement: / French marigolds, Shasta / daisies, pansies – which / I put into water / in a Dixie cup. // Rule Number One:No / picking flowers." Throughout The Fortunate Islands, Kelly De-Witt asks us to consider how we judge those we don't know.

Frost said the whole of the book itself is its final poem, and that is true of The Fortunate Islands. It is true of this book's cover art, too. Rafael Trelles's lush, lyrical imagery is so compatible with Kelly-DeWitt's poems that it comes close to serving as an additional poem itself. This attention to detail makes The Fortunate Islands a complete work of art. When I read the final poem in this collection, the title poem, I may have heard that sound Yeats said a poem makes when it's finished, like the click of the lid of a perfectly made box. "In the ink-dark temple / the past seems far away // I can cross the wooden bridge / in either direction."


February 08, 2009

Write comment
smaller | bigger

security image
Write the displayed characters


busy
 

Featured Titles

The Blue City
Gematria Complete
The Country of Loneliness

Upcoming Events

Oct 7 Book Signing 
October 7, 2010
6:30pm - 9:00pm
Ewald Library, Grosse Pointe Park, MI

A book signing with Mary Beth Smith

Oct 21 Poets Follies Reading Series
October 21, 2010
6:30pm - 9:00pm
Ewald Library, Grosse Pointe Park, MI

Fall 2010 Marick Press Launch with books by J. Kates, Laird Hunt, Brian Evenson, Jorge Etcheverry, Francesco Levato, Kjell Espmark, Regina Derieva, and Robin Fulton.

PHOTO GALLERY

Quote of the Season:  Knowledge makes us accountable.