Book Review

Stand in Old Light

Stand in Old Light by Matthew Porubsky is “a stream-of-consciousness look at examining memories and emotion, letting the interpretation flow like water around obstacles in a stream, unrestricted from its continuous sojourn.” This is the poet’s sixth collection, and in it, he examines nearly every aspect of identity. For Porubsky, the self does not just belong to him—but to everyone and everything. His poems ask the reader to consider our relationship with the world and not simply our relationship to the world.

“Do you see the coyote / gray with curling tail / in its long sleep / at your feet? / Me. 

The snail, lost / in the sand, / closing into its shell. Again, me.”

(Porubsky, 24)

Who Needs a Title?
Every poem in Stand in Old Light is enjambed all over the page, utilizing caesura and whitespace to convey certain emotions and highlight certain connections. Think Richard Siken formatting but with the sparseness of e.e. cummings. This unique formatting style lends for certain ideas and certain words to be perceived in new ways. Additionally, it lends a certain natural flow between lines and stanzas.
 

Porbusky takes this flow to another level by choosing to not title his individual poems. I can’t think of the last time I’ve seen something like this, and it works to great effect. It lends the reader a certain frictionless ease to turn the page. In many ways, it feels as though the poems themselves don’t end, but begin to feed into one another. 

A Treasure Trove of Memorable Lines

Normally, in these reviews, I like to take a deeper dive into my favorite poem from the collection. However, because Porubsky has chosen to forgo titles altogether, emphasizing the cohesiveness of the entire collection, highlighting an individual poem doesn’t seem right. 

Instead, I will leave you with a few of my stand out lines. If these don’t convince you that Stand in Old Light is worth the read, I don’t know what could. 

One of my favorite images from the entire collection is from the opening to the poem on page 3,

              Hover 

                          heart-like.

              Rain steps from clouds—

blue-silver swords to air.

I am absolutely obsessed with “Hover / heart-like.” It’s one of those lines that you read and just wish you could have written it. When a line this good appears on only page 3, you know that you’ve got a good book ahead of you. And it’s true, Porubsky delivers again and again. I’ll pull one more of my favorites and then let you enjoy the collection unspoiled.

This example is more about the sequence, though it does end on a stunning line as well. It is from page 40.

             I don’t tell them

             the rainbow is just in our eyes,

             not actually in the sky.

             I grab a handful of mud,

             throw along with them,

all of us adding

             a color each of us needs.

Stand in Old Light delivers beautiful moments like this over and over again; each moment is not just powerful in and of itself but elevated by each line above and below it. This collection is exactly that: a collection. It is a river, seamlessly ebbing and flowing from one moment to the next. And I would encourage you to wade in. Let Porubsky’s poems wash over you.

— C. W. Bryan, Book Review Editor
Founder and writer at poetryispretentious.com, Bryan is the author of the chapbook Celine: An Elegy, published with Bottlecap Press, and an upcoming full-length collection, No Bird Lives in my Heart, to be published with In Case of Emergency Press.

Book Review Series font image

from Stand in Old Light

00:00
Stand in Old Light - Porubsky

Author Statement

Stand in Old Light focuses on a personal journey of change and how it coincides with relationships with self, family, friends, and memories. These poems show how all elements of internal and external interactions combine to form a mosaic of life –– small and sometimes broken pieces combining to create a product one can admire, accept, and use as inspiration to continue on the path of change and self-exploration. 

3 Questions

Matthew Porubsky

INK: What most inspires you to write?

M.P.: Music gets my brain working and blood pumping. It could be Leonard Cohen one day, Flower Face the next, and Björk after that, but they seem to hit me in the same way –– a shared alignment of emotions that create reality. I add whispers of music in all my poems.

INK: What does your writing routine look like?

M.P.: It’s about as random as it could be. I’m always writing and taking notes in my mind, but I don’t sit down to write until the spirits move me. This system works best for me because it keeps writing from feeling forced and creates an exciting atmosphere for the ritual of writing by heightening the value of the act.

INK: Name a favorite poem you feel everyone should read and why.

M.P. “Sea Church” by Aimee Nezhukumatathil is a recent favorite. The images have a conjuring quality to them. And she shifts the meaning of “church” into something transcendent and applicable to everyone –– a sacredness defined by the individual.

Q&A with C.W. Bryan

C.W. Bryan: Your indentation, enjambment, caesura, and use of whitespace all lend themselves to a very visual reading experience. What inspired your formatting? And what do you think that formatting lends the poems that otherwise might be missing were they all to be traditionally left-aligned? 

 

M.P.: I wanted to actively engage the reader on the page, so all the visual elements mentioned felt like the right way to make that happen. It helps prompt the exploration of what is happening inside the poems. As the book developed, I realized it lent to the mosaic quality of the collection and how events that might seem random and disconnected join in the grand constellation of self-defined existence.

C.W. Bryan: The way some of your poems bounce between scenes, images, and emotions reminds me of Sylvia Plath. Even stylistically, especially your short declarative sentences are reminiscent of poems like “Elm” and “Nick and the Candlestick.” The book also includes an epigraph from Robert Lowell. Is it fair to say your poetry is inspired by the Confessional poets? Or is it something else entirely?

 

M.P.: Well, that’s a fine compliment and a great conclusion. Plath and Lowell, along with Anne Sexton, have always been an inspiration for me but I have never actively traversed their confessional territories until writing Stand in Old Light. The epigraph for the book comes from Lowell’s poem “Dolphin” where he also writes, “plotted perhaps too freely with my life, / not avoiding injury to others, / not avoiding injury to myself— / to ask compassion …” Those lines get to the heart of the matter in Stand in Old Light –– realization of transgressions, acknowledgment of effects, and compassion with oneself and others as we become … well, whatever it is that we choose to become.

C.W. Bryan: Whenever I read a collection of poems that are separated into sections, I am instantly curious to know why they are sectioned that way. What was the delineation for you? Why did you feel it important to portray your work in four parts?

 

M.P.: The sections can be interpreted in several ways. One way could be the traditional hero’s journey –– in this case, I would say “anti-hero.” The first section is where the recognition of change is realized; the second is a journey into the desert to transform; the third illustrates how the enlightened return influences all aspects of life; and the final section showcases the acceptance of how change yields brighter possibilities. A similar interpretation could be made by linking the sections with the seasons, starting with the first section as fall and the final section as summer. Most of all, the sections lend to the cyclical nature of change, a vital part of this collection.

Book Review Series

New authors and books featured each month here on the blog.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Book Review

Looking To Be Considered

Contact us HERE and fill out the form. At this time, we are only considering poetry collections, chapbooks, and flash fiction or short story collections. (150pgs or less) We appreciate your interest and look forward to reading your work!

INK blog font image, welcome to our blog
Scroll to Top