Poetry for Students

(Rick Simeone) #1

190 Poetry for Students


If you go south of Hollywood on LaBrea and
turn east on West 3rd Street, you will travel through
the heart of Hancock Park, an L.A. neighborhood
built in the 1920s to accommodate the needs of
non-Hollywood nabobs, like the Getty family. The
street passes by massive English Tudor mansions
with odd Spanish Colonial addenda, a beautiful golf
course and occasional LaLa Land eccentricities
(the mini-villa, for instance, with the 17 life-size
reproductions of Michelangelo’s David lining
the driveway). On this overcast May morning, the
jacaranda and magnolia trees are in full bloom
along the side streets.
Poet and novelist Carol Muske-Dukes lives in
the Windsor Square section of this neighborhood,
in a pied-a-terre that does not, as it happens, par-
ticularly allude to the reign of King Henry VIII or
the Spanish conquest of Granada. Her dogs clamor
at the gate when PW shows up, but become a
friendly welcoming committee when Muske-Dukes
appears.
This must be an eerie season for the writer. On
the bright side, her latest book, Life After Death
(Forecasts, Apr. 3), an elegantly written novel of
manners, will surely be well received this summer.
The story centers on a St. Paul, Minn., woman,
Boyd Schaeffer, whose 42-year-old husband, Rus-
sell, drops dead of a heart attack. She goes back
into medicine and starts an awkward romance with
a funeral home director. The book is full of mar-
velous throwaway pieces, prose poems of a sort.
Here’s Freddy, Boyd and Russell’s daughter, on the
playground with a book, after shooing away a play-
mate who smells:
Freddy returns to her consideration of the tree and
her letters, safe in her milieu. To her right, near the
aquarium, grim, asthmatic Felicia batters pegs into
holes, wheezing and grunting. They are all in place,
all the categories and predictable social types that
she will meet and remeet throughout her life. The

Aggressor throwing blocks, the Whiner sobbing in
his wet plast pants, the Seducers, he and she tossing
their curls, the Good Citizen preparing to report to
the Teacher.
Favorable criticism might cast a retrospective
glow of interest over Muske-Dukes’s two previous
novels, Dear Digby(Viking, 1989) and Saving St.
Germ(Viking, 1993), the last of which was a New
York TimesNotable Book of the year. Both were
published to critical acclaim, but neither achieved
more than modest popular success.
The dark side is hinted at in the novel’s dedi-
cation: “For David, who gave me constant love and
encouragement in writing this book since 1994 and
whom I lost on October 9, 2000.” “David” is David
Dukes, her husband, the actor who starred in tele-
vision (The Winds of War), theater (Bent) and film
(The First Deadly Sin). After Muske-Dukes had
completed the book, her husband unexpectedly suf-
fered a heart attack and died. It was a cruel coin-
cidence, an instance of what Thomas Hardy called
“satires of circumstance,” that Boyd’s fictional
trauma was visited on her author.
Muske-Dukes (who uses the simple “Muske”
for her poetry) has been a recognized figure in the
literary world since her first volume of poems,
Camouflage,came out from University of Pitts-
burgh Press in 1975. Since then her poetry has gar-
nered her major recognition in the poetry world and
the prizes and grants that go with it. She was at the
epicenter of the feminist surge in poetry in the ’70s
and ’80s. But her roots are in the tradition-bound
Great Plains.
Her grandfather was “a Separator Man / har-
vesting the wheat / in Wyndmere.” Wyndmere is a
town in North Dakota, where her mother’s family
still owns land. “Back in the Great Depression they
were land rich, but poor. My mother was a frus-
trated poet. She got a scholarship, but the family
couldn’t afford to have her go to college. So she
married my father and had a family, but she always
had a great store of poetry she’d memorized. I re-
member she would insert these asides into her bits,
like ‘Let me not to the marriage of true minds—
put your dishes in the sink—admit impediments.’
I remember it would puzzle me coming upon these
poems and thinking, hey, where’s the part about
putting the dishes in the sink?”
More seriously, Muske-Dukes appreciates the
act of memorizing poetry, which used to be a stan-
dard element of the teaching curriculum, as a way
of “embodying the poem.” “Joseph Brodsky,” she
says, “who was teaching at Columbia when I was
also teaching there, used to have his graduate

Our Side

She was at the
epicenter of the feminist
surge in poetry in the ’70s
and ’80s. But her roots are
in the tradition-bound
Great Plains.”
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