There’s this ledge you look over. A railing you lean out fromand stare down at the world of souls like the feeder at Sea World.And I didn’t know a hillbilly from dark matter, a skewered star,looking down beside a hallelujah gallery of bureaucrat angels.My soon-to-be parents would move from Kentucky to Ohio,so I wouldn’t go hungry as a kid. And I wouldn’t have to bereferred to, unfavorably, in comparisons to a coal bucket. So what if I didn’t know my ass from a glass of buttermilk. So what if I’d lug a Southern accent around like a school bag. A box of rocks might have had more walking-around sense,but I was sure that I’d be happy—the way he looked at herand the way she looked back at him like we’d be all right.A family. And if it didn’t happen this way, it could have. Who can say that it didn’t? I mean, there’s all this talkof a heaven they’ve gone to now, having left the body.I’m just saying it works both ways. Or that it should. I’m saying any given heaven goes by several names. And one of those is a synonym for Fleming-Neon.
The Nascent Soul Selects a Set of Appalachian Parents
Feature Date
- April 27, 2019
Series
Selected By
Share This Poem
Print This Poem
Copyright © 2018 by Roy Bentley.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
Roy Bentley’s poems have appeared in Blackbird, Shenandoah, Rattle, The Southern Review as well as in Prairie Schooner and elsewhere. He is the recipient of a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment of the Arts, and fellowships from the Florida Division of Cultural Affairs and the Ohio Arts Council. His fifth book, Walking with Eve in the Loved City, was a finalist for the Miller Williams Poetry Prize by Billy Collins and is available from the University of Arkansas Press. A new collection, American Loneliness, is out from Lost Horse Press.
Arkansas
University of Arkansas
Finalist, 2018 Miller Williams Poetry Prize
Walking with Eve in the Loved City is an ambitious collection. Using a variety of male figures—Jeff Goldblum, Ringo Starr, the poet’s uncle Billy, to name a few—these poems skillfully interrogate masculinity and its cultural artifacts, searching for a way to reconcile reverence for the father figure with a crisis of faith about the world as run by men. And yet, despite the gravity of the subjects these poems engage, this is a hopeful, frequently funny book that encourages the reader to look deeply at the world, and then to laugh if she can.
Roy Bentley often accomplishes this work through a careful balancing of honesty and misdirection, as when in the poem “Can’t Help Falling in Love” the real drama of the narrative—the appearance of an affair between the speaker’s father and a drive-in restaurant carhop—operates as a backdrop for the eight-year-old speaker’s puerile attraction to the woman; or when the vampire Nosferatu (a frequent figure in the poems) materializes in a trailer park, his immortality becoming a lens through which to process the speaker’s righteous anger about wealth and poverty.
God too features prominently—as does doubt. Drawing from the vernacular of his childhood, Bentley accesses the simultaneous austerity and lyrical opulence of the King James Bible to invent stories in which the last note struck is often a call to pay kinder attention. More than anything, these poems serve as humanistic advocates, using the power of narrative—film, interview, imagination, memoir—to highlight how people matter.
Walking with Eve in the Loved City invites the reader to join in this watching and witnessing, to take part in renewing how we see.
“A lively collection that instructs, delights, and uplifts.”
—Billy Collins
“In Walking with Eve in the Loved City, the reader accompanies Roy Bentley through an idiosyncratic retelling of history and a harrowing examination of the poet’s own life. Bentley’s relatives, his father and namesake, and his grandmother Potter appear alongside Robert Plant, Shelley, F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, not to mention Eve, who appraises the poet ‘like a sales rack.’ The cast of characters reinforces Bentley’s observation that ‘All things are present at the same time in one place.’ He goes on to tell us ‘that place has a name we translate as paradise.’ I am happy to walk in Roy Bentley’s paradise, with all its imperfections, and be taken by the music I find there.”
—Al Maginnes, author of The Next Place
“I’ve admired Roy Bentley’s poems for years, and perhaps none more than the ones in this new collection. These are poems of grace and wonder that locate themselves in that space between what is and what might have been. They capture a feeling of reaching beyond regret in an imperfect world (often by our own making), but one that still startles us with beauty and redemption in the hands of a poet like Roy Bentley, who knows how to give it to us straight while returning us to paradise, or at least a memory of that long-ago Eden.”
—Lee Martin, author of Bright Forever and Late One Night
Poetry Daily Depends on You
With your support, we make reading the best contemporary poetry a treasured daily experience. Consider a contribution today.