Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New book of poems take us back to Armenian-American child-hood

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New book of poems take us back to Armenian-American child-hood

    Nearer the Heart. New book of poems take us back to Armenian-American
    child-hood

    The Armenian Mirror Spectator
    by Helene Pilibosian
    5 August 2006

    This new book of poems by a very prolific writer, a child of Armenian
    immigrants who came to America after the Genocide, takes us back to an
    Armenian-American child-hood spent in Racine and in Fresno. These
    poems are made of moments, impressions out of the past and some doubts
    about identity.

    The name of the first section, `These are a few of my favorite
    things,' is about the neighbor Ruby or the girlfriend, Barbara Smith,
    Douglas Park, the pond, and his mother.

    There are three absorbing poems about William Saroyan and two of his
    relatives, for the author knew the family and considered the great
    writer his mentor. That fame, being so prized, brings much attention
    even after death and brings the readers snatches of fascination. Later
    on in the book there is another poem called `Three' about a visit to
    Bill Saroyan's home. The author's look at the Armenian past as
    history including the sight of some Turks doesn't communicate a heavy
    sense of tragedy.

    In the section titled `Beginnings' there is a charming poem about
    bridges that take us `across our town and the interstices of the
    heart.' Indeed, the bridges across hearts are precious and sometimes
    difficult-. There is a lovely reminiscence about asking at
    Bachaklian's for magart (the starter for yogurt) and by mistake asking
    for sarma (stuffed grape leaves). And add more scenes about fishing, the
    fish fry, the yellow bricks of the abandoned factory, trains, the city,
    the town, and Sammy Bar ice cream and you can relive this life through
    nostalgia.

    A poem tided `Thompsondale' begins, `We will never leave the
    picnic at Thompsondale, our mothers very beautiful in their summer
    dresses, our fathers with straw hats and colored suspenders.' The
    details turn the clock back and keep it there. There is also a nice poem
    about e. e. cummings, the famous American poet which the author wrote
    out of admiration for his very original work.

    In `Places' the author writes a poem about being in Yugoslavia,
    asking `had the mysterious East always been in our blood and bone?'
    This writing about a foreign location is unusual in Kherdian's work,
    but it is telling. Writing about places and his reaction to them seems
    to be his forte, though the places are usually in the United States,
    places he inhabited or grew up in.

    The style of these poems is direct and narrative in telling the reader
    about experiences that have shaped his mind as he was growing up and
    thus his future. Readers will find his down-to-earth approach
    accessible.

    This is a book that will appeal to readers of any age and even those who
    don't usually read poetry.

    _________________

    Nearer the Heart by David Kherdian was published by Taderon Press
    (London and Reading, 2006, 94 pages) in association with the Gomidas
    Institute. It is distributed worldwide by Garod Books Ltd.
    ([email protected]).
Working...
X