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Poets and Poems: Andrea Potos and “Marrow of Summer”

By Glynn Young 1 Comment

Rose Andrea Potos

Andrea Potos Writes About Relationships

It’s somewhat obvious to say that a poet writes with precision, defined as a carefully chosen word that delivers exactly the meaning the poet intends. But rarely have I read a collection of poems in which the poet’s precision is as constant in poem after poem as Marrow of Summer by Andrea Potos. In this latest collection, Potos has written 52 generally short poems, many of them about relationships — and her precision packs a wallop.

Perhaps it is the brevity of each poem — very few longer than 15 lines — that requires succinct and precise words. One thinks of Emily Dickinson often while reading these poems, and, in fact, two of them cite Dickinson. But Potos also cites Keats as her inspiration. One poem is about the poet (“Conversing with Keats”) welcoming her to the house in which he lived in Camden, London, near Hampstead Heath. If you’ve been there, or even seen photos of the house, her poem becomes a piece of visual reality.

Potos writes about London, about growing up, about art, and, perhaps most of all, about relationships, the ones that have shaped her and have been a profound influence on her life — with her daughter, her husband, her mother, her grandmother, and a friend who’s dying. She visits graves. She experiences the pandemic. She notices the things that trigger memories, like a coffee maker, a robin on the porch, and listening to the playing of a cello. She walks in St. Stephen’s Green in Dublin after the rain. She considers the brushstrokes in a painting by Manet, and how a woman is dressed in a painting by Van Gogh.

And she remembers that day she was working in a store.

Revelation in Retail

Marrow of Summer Andrea PotosThey told me to leave the register;
I wander over to ribbons,
to replenish all the spools where I could.
At my feet, a box of overstock.
I stood there, struck
by all the hues, announcing
their presence—red like the pith of each rose
in Queen Mary’s garden,
silver with a sheen like etched
lightning in late summer.
And the green—of the green—
the forest I once dream-walked
through and thought I had lost.
And then the ivory, gleaming
like the insides of a shell, or the pearlescent
sky on that morning my daughter

arrived in the world.

—Andrea Potos

Andrea Potos

Andrea Potos

Potos is the author of nine poetry collections. Her poems have been featured in a considerable number of print and online literary publications, and several of her books have received Outstanding Achievement Awards in Poetry from the Wisconsin Library Association. She’s also received the William Stafford Prize in Poetry from Rosebud Magazine and the James Heart Poetry Prize from the North American Review. She lives in Madison, Wisconsin.

Read the poems of Marrow of Summer in a quiet place. Or read them in a less-than-quiet place, and your soul calms and quietens. Precise words, used sparingly and with intention, can do that.

Photo by NathalieST, Creative Commons, via Flickr. Post by Glynn Young.

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How to Read a Poem by Tania Runyan

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How to Read a Poem uses images like the mouse, the hive, the switch (from the Billy Collins poem)—to guide readers into new ways of understanding poems. Anthology included.

“I require all our incoming poetry students—in the MFA I direct—to buy and read this book.”

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Glynn Young
Glynn Young
Editor and Twitter-Party-Cool-Poem-Weaver at Tweetspeak Poetry
Glynn Young lives in St. Louis where he retired as the team leader for Online Strategy & Communications for a Fortune 500 company. Glynn writes poetry, short stories and fiction, and he loves to bike. He is the author of the Civil War romance Brookhaven, as well as Poetry at Work and the Dancing Priest Series. Find Glynn at Faith, Fiction, Friends.
Glynn Young
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Comments

  1. Laura Lynn Brown says

    April 26, 2022 at 10:50 am

    The poem you chose shows how a line of space can show anticipation and a gap showing a significant before-and-after before that unexpected last line. What a rich memory to go from a job (I’m guessing at JoAnn’s Fabrics or something like that) to all those memories evoked by ribbon colors.

    Reply

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