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Loading... Here, Bullet (edition 2005)by Brian Turner
Work InformationHere, Bullet by Brian Turner
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This is a remarkable book of poems takes the reader to the U.S. war in Iraq, where the author served in the U.S. Army as an infantry leader in 2003-2004. The situation was hellish, but what is remarkable about these poems is their precision and delicacy with which it is communicated. That is not to say that they are not graphic; in some places they are, painfully so -- some of the images will be hard to forget. But the author doesn't shout and scream, he speaks clearly and unemotionally, showing us what happened rather than telling us. He does this through images, some as gross as a 2000 pound bomb, some as ethereal as a flight of birds. He also shows us how the war affects various people, some American but many Iraqi, and most ambiguous. The author himself is notably absent. All in all, a moving and beautiful work. I look forward to reading more of Mr. Turner's poetry. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/us/08military.html?th=&emc=th&pagewant... http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/27/books/review/27clover.html?_r=1 From "Hwy 1" Cranes roost atop power lines in enormous bowl-shaped nests of sticks and twigs, and when a sergeant shoots one from the highway it pauses, as if amazed that death has found it here, at 7 A.M. on such a beautiful morning, before pitching over the side and falling in a slow unraveling of feathers and wings. From "The Hurt Locker" Nothing but hurt left here. ... Open the hurt locker and learn how rough men come hunting for souls. "AB Negative (The Surgeon's Poem)" From "Ashbah" The ghosts of American soldiers wander the streets of Balad by night, unsure of their way home, exhausted... ...a voice sounds from the minaret, a soulful call reminding them how alone they are, how lost. From "Where the Telemetries End" We share a long night of breathing. From "Najaf, 1820" It is November, the clouds made of gunpowder and rain, the earth pregnant with the dead... ...with room enough yet for what the years will bring... From "For Vultures: A Dystopia" For their hunger, for their patience, for each circle traced in shadow and sunk down in the earth... Let them witness every plume of smoke, every fallen soldier, every woman's last kiss for the ones they love... From "Dreams from the Malaria Pills (Barefoot)" He's questioning why blood is needed, and so much, why he's wheeled through his hometown streets on a gurney draped in camouflaged sheets. ... You carry the pearls of war within you, bombs swallowed whole and saved for later. From "How Bright It Is" It will take many nails from the coffinmakers to shut out this light... Here, Bullet by Brian Turner, who served in the U.S. army for seven years after receiving his MFA and was a team leader for one year in Iraq with the 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, won the 2005 Beatrice Hawley Award and was printed by Alice James Books — a nonprofit cooperative poetry press. (The title poem, “Here, Bullet,” was recently profiled in the Virtual Poetry Circle.) The collection is broken down into four sections, and each section is preceded by a quote relevant to it, with some even quoting the Qur’an. Turner is adept at illustrating the violence of war, but also the humanity that accompanies it. From the startling nature of rockets going off over head to the silence of bullets as they enter the body, he provides a keen eye into how those instruments of war impact both sides of the battle equally psychologically, physically, and spiritually. Soldiers who craft wartime poetry have generally either fallen into the category of using graphic violence to shock and awe the reader or using quieter imagery to bring about reader understanding about psychological impacts of battle. There also are those that have political poems that are heavy on criticism or propaganda, but those would fall less into the wartime poetry category. Turner combines both violence and peace in his imagery, but in a unique way that has violence silently creeping into the lines and shocking readers. For instance, in “Eulogy” (page 20), readers may hardly notice the suicide of Private Miller because he takes “brass and fire into his mouth,” but once the birds fly up off the water by the sound, it is clear the brass and fire are from a gun. While outright, violent images can be eye-opening for readers, the quiet power in some of Turner’s lines are that much more lasting. Read the full review: http://savvyverseandwit.com/2011/08/here-bullet-by-brian-turner.html http://american-poetry.suite101.com/article.cfm/brian_turner_here_bullet_soldier... I got the book after I heard Lieutenant Colonel John Nagl talk about it on NPR. Nagl helped author the US Army's Counterinsurgency Field Manual and also wrote a gripping review of Brian Turner's poetry collection. He says he is deeply moved by it. The poems bring back the memories of the comrades and friends lost in the war. no reviews | add a review
Awards
A first-person account of the Iraq War by a solider-poet, winner of the 2005 Beatrice Hawley Award. No library descriptions found. |
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Much of this brought back memories.
From Ashbah, 'The ghosts of American soldiers
wander the streets of Balad by night
. . .
the desert wind blowing trash
down the narrow alleys as a voice
sounds from the minaret'
Whether Turner is speaking of the dead exhaustion of multiple missions or that the ghosts of the departed still linger, both realities are true and Turner allows the both a presence without interpreting for the reader.
In R&R he paints a convincing picture of the Soldier as much more than the robotic symbol of foreign policy, one who has the life of a lover, of family, of mission all fighting for space in the same mind.
'I have a lover with hair that falls
like autumn leaves on my skin.
Water that rolls in smooth and cool
as anesthesia. Birds that carry
all my bullets into the barrel of the sun.'
If there is a complaint, and it's not much of one, each poem is buried in the psyche of one Soldier. The poems are deeply confessional. There's another side of the words from loved ones, the commo between Soldiers that is hinted at but it makes me feel that something personal to the poet is held at arm's length. Again, it's minor because most writers cannot get the feeling of one set of emotions as deeply as this one does in '2000 pounds' showing how a bomb blast alters everyone.
One of the best poems at showing these lingering effects comes toward the end in 'Night in Blue.'
'I have only the shadows under the leaves
to take with me, the quiet of the desert,
the low fog of Balad, orange groves
. . . .
I have a woman crying in my car
late at night when the stars go dim,
moonlight and sand as a resonance
of the dust of bones, and nothing more.'
Worth every penny and the time it takes to read it over and over. ( )