What’s in a Name? Lost Letters and Other Animals by Carrie Bennett; Besiege Me by Nicholas Wong; Returning the Sword to the Stone by Mark Leidner

Jonathan Russell Clark
| Reviews

Bennett’s poems are spare, fragmented, and haunting. The book’s final entry, “The Lost Letters,” claim to be “letter fragments…found in the North Woods,” parts of which “are missing from snow thaw, severe temperature changes, and ice storms.” These look like this:

Maybe I am flying

needed

this letter

without

comfort. When I go inside the rooms                    my

mind
walls I do not recognize

These conjure up a similar eeriness as surveillance footage of missing persons, the kind in which the person’s actions are inexplicable, or speak to some unknown distress, like a face responding in fear to a figure off-screen. The exact meaning of these letters is left ambiguous, which only amplifies its uncanny quality. Lost Letters and Other Animals is an aching and searching collection.

 

Jonathan Russell Clark is the author of An Oasis of Horror in a Desert of Boredom and the forthcoming Skateboard. His writing has appeared in the New York Times Book Review, the L.A. Times, the Boston Globe, and the San Francisco Chronicle.

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