Pearl Pirie was good enough to discuss Hailey Higdon’s The State in Which (2013) in her “95books” project over at her blog.
Thanks much! Although it is a bit disappointing to realize one of the pages got
flipped (I’ll have to get her a replacement copy). This is actually the third
review of Higdon’s chapbook, after Edric Mesmer discussed such over at Yellow Field, and Ryan Pratt discussed it over at the ottawa poetry newsletter.
211. The State in Which by Hailey Higdon
(above/ground, 2013)
This was a project to
write one poem per month. My copy of the chapbook was assembled wrong somehow
so continuity was mussed in June and July. It was kind of diary and
self-conscious of writing as writing. It fell in and out of focus. For example,
the first half of December,
so many people are ok
with not being the best
versions of themselves
it was a million
domestic
situations that made me
choose from one thing
to the next
rebel, this is what I
did
I stopped the idle,
saying
yes, so much more often,
so much more, storing up, collecting yeses,
risk, but the inverse
of take it and move on,
I used to
keep repeating the same
mistake–
quitting days, I know
better now
The first three lines
sound promising. Then its structured as stream of consciousness. Why not take
the time to untangle. Part of it is the chaotic surge forward of life “I am
looking for jobs, trying to locate the future perfect. How poinsettias arrive
in the grocery story each year, looking so consistently identical, you can’t
help staring.”
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