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Four in Hand (American Poets Continuum…
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Four in Hand (American Poets Continuum Series, 198) (edition 2023)

by Alicia Mountain (Author)

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852,244,639 (3)1
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
There is a risk for any reader approaching Four in Hand. A reader can get trapped by the mastery of execution and the structural solidity of not one but four sonnet crowns, and forget about the emotional content of the poems. But if there is a risk, it is not without its joy. Risking being fascinated by the form, allows to be embraced by the sentiments and hard truths it contains. The poems do not offer easy answers to hard questions. It does, however, promises that we will not have to face them alone. At times evocative of Minnie Bruce Pratt (in "Initial Descent") or Robert Lax (in "Sparingly"), Alicia Mountain has a captivating voice of her own.
  MariaLuisaLacroix | Jun 12, 2023 |
Showing 5 of 5
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I read less formal poetry than I used to, but after reading a snippet of one of Mountain's heroic crowns, I was excited to dig into this collection of four long poems, especially since I do adore longer poems and they're somewhat harder to find in today's world. The four poems here are incredibly different, which is what makes this a difficult review. "Initial Descent" was, without doubt, my favorite--it uses the form to perform a gorgeous reveal of meaning that aligns Mountain's powerful use of language with social justice, meaning-making, and personal experience. There are some beautiful moments in the poem, and as soon as I finished it, I went back to the start and read it again. My second-favorite was the opening heroic crown, "Train Town Howl", which is another stellar example of the form even if there were moments where I felt the form dictated a bit more than was necessary and made for some rougher moments than there might have been otherwise (which had, admittedly, also been the case in the previous poem I mentioned, but to a lesser extent).

And yet, the other two poems felt as if they were included only because of their form. I could appreciate "Sparingly" to some extent, though it was too minimalist for my taste. Then, I have to admit that the ending heroic crown, "MyMerrill", feels more like a weird experiment than a finished piece. I actually got only a few stanzas into it before I had to flip to the back of the book to find any notes that might explain what I was reading. The notes did explain, but unfortunately, they made it even clearer that the poem was more of an experiment/challenge than anything. I read a bit more of it, but eventually had to give up on it, and it's hard for me to understand why a seasoned poet would feel the need to include it alongside such powerful poems as the ones that came before it. If not for this poem, the book would probably have been a 4/4.5* read for me, but as is, that last big piece of the book left me just a bit short of annoyed, more than anything, as it seemed like such wasted space/time.

I'd recommend this to readers who want to explore more contemporary form poetry, though it's unlikely that it will lead me to go out of my way to look for more form poetry or more work from Mountain, much as I really did enjoy "Initial Descent." ( )
  whitewavedarling | Jul 16, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This is a set of 4 heroic crowns, where each sonnet in the sequence begins with the last line of the previous poem, until the final poem, which consists of all 14 initial lines preceding it. To me, the last section, "MyMerrill" is the best. It is made of of phrases found in newsletters from Merrill Lynch, and it captures with humor the absurdity of our relationship with these virtual entities. My least favorite section is the second, "Sparingly." It is an interesting concept: each line in each sonnet is made up of a single word, so each poem is only 14 words long. It is indeed spare. But because of the strictures of the crown, Mountain had to close and open some sonnets with connective words (e.g., "that"). To me, it was an exercise that didn't quite work. Overall, though, these are interesting poems that make use of an almost forgotten form.
  wrmjr66 | Jul 1, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I enjoyed Four in Hand by Alicia Mountain. Some of my favorite lines: I think I will always look like a child when I am alone; this new dripping fear absent water; water held a living architecture; it's okay to let your body make love poems; with strength and your positioning you can give love, be loved, and keep your trust in trust. I will read this book again.
  LisaDeNiscia | Jun 19, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
There is a risk for any reader approaching Four in Hand. A reader can get trapped by the mastery of execution and the structural solidity of not one but four sonnet crowns, and forget about the emotional content of the poems. But if there is a risk, it is not without its joy. Risking being fascinated by the form, allows to be embraced by the sentiments and hard truths it contains. The poems do not offer easy answers to hard questions. It does, however, promises that we will not have to face them alone. At times evocative of Minnie Bruce Pratt (in "Initial Descent") or Robert Lax (in "Sparingly"), Alicia Mountain has a captivating voice of her own.
  MariaLuisaLacroix | Jun 12, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
.

This collection consists of four sonnet crowns (heroic crowns, technically). I hadn't heard of the form before learning of this book and I didn't anticipate liking the form. And maybe in other hands I would not, but I loved Alicia Mountain's, They are excellent.

Well, three of them are excellent. In one, the sonnets get but one word per line and, while it's a good poem, it seems like a waste of the form. But that's me.

The others are great, even the fourth which is composed entirely out of lines lifted from emails she received from Merrill Lynch. The first is a paean to lesbian longing, the third about family. But all four have overlapping interests.

Plus, I just loved the form. I'm intrigued by it and want to visit that playground.

And Alicia's voice is terrific. I just started reading Matthew Zapruder's Why Poetry and his early emphasis on taking poets' words literally I a) loved and b) found applicable to Mountain's simultaneously plain and ranging style.
  thmazing | May 17, 2023 |
Showing 5 of 5

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