Robert Fillman, House Bird. Poems. Terrapin Books. 2022.

A poem near the midpoint of Robert Fillman’s House Bird reads, “He told himself to hold on / to this feeling, the fall term / not quite done. He’d have it then—” (“All day long there’d been papers”). The speaker retreats from his office and soaks in the sounds of birds, moving water, and the crunch of leaves as a long semester closes, and he finds some small comfort in nature for the final push of grading and administrative work. This sentiment of capturing feelings …

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Craig Finlay, The Very Small Mammoths of Wrangel Island. Poems. Urban Farmhouse Press, 2021.

The Very Small Mammoths of Wrangel Island doubles as a reflective journey and trivia night preparation packet. Finlay’s life as a self-described transient is fully displayed across this seven-part collection of prose poems as he relays a mix of little-known historical factoids and personal musings.

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Richard Jones, Paris. Poems. Tebot Bach, 2021.

Richard Jones opens Paris with a quote written on the wall of Shakespeare & Company, perfectly setting the stage for the following trip in the iconic French capital. Jones’s extended stay abroad is a quest of inspiration the audience is invited to experience second-hand. He delivers an expansive view of the well-trod tourist destinations along with the less-travelled streets and alleys that resonate on a personal level for the author. The reader is immersed in the world of French artists from Rilke and Rodin to Baudelaire, Redouté, and Dalí to explore the lives and times of icons across artistic media. Some poems, such as “Courbet” and “Brancusi,” usher the reader through museums and workshops where paintings and the tools that created them are favorably examined, and others, such as “Dalí” and “The Gift,” linger in kitchens and alleyways, musing on the raw difficulties of creative endeavors. Regardless of the setting and theme, Jones captures each moment with clarity, subverting the tendency to romanticize the city of love while appreciating the beauty born from the land. A collection with this focus may seem arcane, but the themes of searching for purpose, building relationships, and general perseverance are intriguing whether you are a poet living abroad or a student busing tables in the Midwest. Late in the collection, Jones notes that Parisians expect an “aura” from poetry—something that spiritually transcends beyond simple struggles of the day-to-day (52-53). Throughout this work, Jones finds ways to do both. He layers the base, human needs and obstacles with the broad, illuminating expectations of the “aura,” creating an engaging book of poetry for anyone interested in the pursuit of a passion.

Richard Jones, Paris. Poems. Tebot Bach, 2021.

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In addition to Paris, Richard Jones is the author of The Minor Key (Green Linden Press, 2021), Avalon (Green Linden Press, 2020), and Stranger on Earth (Copper Canyon Press, 2018). Editor since 1980 of the literary journal Poetry East, he curates its many anthologies, such as London, The Last Believer in Words, and Origins. In 2020 he published his 100th issue, an anthology titled The Bliss of Reading.

Aaron Cole is the Book Review Editor of Pembroke Magazine and a frequent contributor to our pages. He works as a lecturer in the Department of English, Literature, and World Languages at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. Aaron graduated from Western Carolina University, where he earned a BA in English with a minor in creative writing, a BS in education, and an MA in English with a concentration in the literature and theory of the Global South.

Roy Bentley, Beautiful Plenty. Poems. Main Street Rag, 2021.

Roy Bentley’s collection celebrates and mourns the late twentieth century with a series of personal memories that are sure to connect with any self-reflective reader. Late in the collection, Bentley posits the question: “But isn’t that what poems do, offer reasons? Isn’t that poetry?” (50). By the time a reader reaches this question, it will seem rhetorical as the prior forty-nine pages are filled with musings, reasons, and crucial reflections on humanity. The poems develop nostalgic landscapes marked by packed drive-ins (“The Last Drive-In in Newark, Ohio Closes”), rock-and-roll eight-tracks (“Ankh”), and pot smoke (“World Enough and Time”) that set the stage for Bentley’s commentary. He populates scenes with people cycling through his life, proving his exceptional skill for acute observation. Childhood in Ohio with family ties to Kentucky serve as the bedrock for his perspective, but his unique insights are equally shaped by growing militarization of the US throughout the 1900s. For every rosy image of time spent with a lover over a joint, there is a stark moment of childhood fear induced by nuclear threat in poems such as “My Father Is a Good Man, If by ‘Good’ You Mean Someone Who Lets His Kid Play in a Fallout Shelter the October JFK Has Said He Will Not Back Down.” Bentley’s own reflections become time stamps, leading the reader through decades of turmoil that shaped the country. The collection is honest and balanced in this way. It rejects a simple narrative of the nation nearing the turn of the century by presenting complex events and emotions of the times through a vividly specific life. Readers are thrust behind the wheel of now-vintage cars, into the cockpit of a plane, and into various small-town locales to explore Bentley’s own triumphs and tragedies, but each reminiscence draws relatable struggles of love, loss, and life’s purpose to the surface. Reading the three sections of poems resembles a tour of Bentley’s history structured to tap into the larger human experience in the States. 

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Roy Bentley is the author of Walking with Eve in the Loved City, chosen by Billy Collins as a finalist for the Miller Williams poetry prize; Starlight Taxi, winner of the Blue Lynx Poetry Prize; The Trouble with a Short Horse in Montana, chosen by John Gallaher as winner of the White Pine Poetry Prize; as well as My Mother’s Red Ford: New & Selected Poems 1986 – 2020 published by Lost Horse Press. Poems have appeared in Pembroke Magazine, The Southern ReviewRattle, ShenandoahNew Ohio Review, and Prairie Schooner among others. His latest is Beautiful Plenty (Main Street Rag, 2021). 

Aaron Cole is the Book Review Editor of Pembroke Magazine and a frequent contributor to our pages. He works as a lecturer in the Department of English, Literature, and World Languages at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. Aaron graduated from Western Carolina University, where he earned a BA in English with a minor in creative writing, a BS in education, and an MA in English with a concentration in the literature and theory of the Global South.