--IT STARTED WITH A WHISPER
I just finished Bud Smith’s fantastic
poetry collection, “Everything Neon.” In
many ways, the poems feel like love letters the reader has found stashed in a
shoe box in someone else’s closet. Both
tender and wise, Smith’s pieces are rendered with the kind of confidence that
comes from a writer whose heart is laid bare on his sleeve, nothing to hide,
nothing left to loose. No matter the
length, each poem is wrought with vitality and tenderness and an acute
awareness that the moments in between the bigger moments are often the ones
that matter most.
In “I Kiss My Wife” Smith writes:
We’re
just one window
of
a thousand windows
looking
down
on
a shared riot.
The collection allows us to scour through
the author’s heart and soul by whatever means we might choose, and in doing so
we discover joy, wide-eyed boyish wonder, and romance in experiences that we
might otherwise overlook or even find trite.
Through Smith’s lens, we journey down city
streets replete with fire escapes, fire alarms blaring, bored policemen,
ambulances streaking by, bridges sagging under the weight of neglect, taxis, and
an ever lurking moon.
Littered among longer piece are potent
gems like “Youth”:
When
we were little
our
mutual dream
was
to slam dunk
so
hard we’d shatter
the
glass backboard
that
was it
our
whole dream
and
now
here
we are.
Some poems, such as “May 4th”—about
the author’s marriage in a movie theater where he’s written his vows on a
parking ticket-- are so goddamn sweet and romantic they make you smile inside,
even while being envious.
“Everything Neon” is riddled with wise
observations and clever lines such as this from “Dead”:
Life
is a weird rumor
somebody
started somewhere.
Other times we are put on notice, as in the
cleverly titled “We Collect Skulls”:
fair
warning:
most
of our heroes get shot in the head.
Finding poetry this honest and
vulnerable, while also being entirely accessible, is a rare thing these days
where most poets rely on gimmicks or word play strung together without any
sense of cohesion, let alone any kind of narrative arc. Smith’s
poetry is like an urban take on what Raymond Carver might have written, spare
yet lush, brimming with answers about what it means to be clear-eyed and alert while
everything around us spins, entangled.
Reading “Everything Neon” makes one want
to fall in love, or in the very least take a new look at the world we
experience and flush it full of bright light.
You can your copy here:
http://budsmithwrites.com/books/everything-neon/
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