What Sparks Poetry

Books We’ve Loved

What Sparks Poetry is a serialized feature in which we invite poets to explore experiences and ideas that spark new poems.

In Books We’ve Loved, we’ve asked our editorial board members and select guest editors to reflect on a book that has been particularly meaningful to them in the last year, with the intention of creating a list of book recommendations for our valued readers.

Andrew Bertaina on Courtney LeBlanc’s Her Whole Bright Life

Amidst the tumultuous day, four children scatter-shotting around the house, I often lack a sense of a mooring point, no firm ground to stand amidst the dishes and dirty feet and whirlwinds of feelings. But I am delighted, perhaps more so than the average person, by the sumptuous delicacy of silence. And beyond that, time itself or at least the way my time is used, has become something I’m obsessed with.

Thus, I was delighted to slip into a warm bath and devote an hour to reading the new book, Her Whole Bright Life, by the poet Courtney LeBlanc. Some writers love to savor poems, but I’ve always loved slipping into a book and reading it through in one sitting, letting the wave of another consciousness wash over you.

I have always been attracted to visceral writing, that which cuts through or illuminates life as it is lived. Perhaps raising children has made me less patient with ornamentation for its own sake. So, I was delighted to sink into LeBlanc’s world, poems about the death of her father and her relationship to her body, poems that are raw and unvarnished in their honesty about grief, about loss, about the management of the body, all those things we cannot ever really control but still try desperately to.

After the bath was over, I kept thinking of an image from her poem, “What This Elegy Wants,” when the speaker wants her father “in the soil/of my heart.” LeBlanc’s poetry has that element I’m always searching for, a reminder, not so much about the beauty of this world but its ongoingness, and the fierceness with which we temporarily cling.

Writing Prompt

Andrew Bertaina says LeBlanc’s poems are “raw and unvarnished in their honesty about grief, about loss, about the management of the body, all those things we cannot ever really control but still try desperately to.” With this idea in mind, compile a list of other aspects of life that “we cannot really control but still try desperately to.” Next, select two or three items from your list and draft a poem exploring and interrogating them. The poem should be tightly controlled, perhaps via metrical or stanzaic restrictions. A sonnet form could work, or you could put syllabic limits on each line. The poem’s controlling mechanisms are for you to decide.

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Andrew Bertaina

Andrew Bertaina is the author of the short story collection One Person Away From You, (University of Arkansas Press), and the forthcoming essay collection, The Body is a Temporary Gathering Place (Autofocus). His work has appeared in The Threepenny Review, Witness Magazine, Prairie Schooner, Orion, and The Best American Poetry. He has an MFA from American University in Washington, DC.