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Poetry Review: The Richard Nixon Snowglobe Rachel Loden has an healthy obsession with President Nixon and his faithful hound Checkers. Loosie knows this, and Loosie knows that, but Loosie doesn’t know jack about poetry. But instead of leaving reviews of stanzas to the experts, we blindly barrel through doorways with guns blazing, oblivious to the terrified children used as human shields that lie within. Thus we approach the latest effort of Rachel Loden, an award-winning poet from Palo Alto, whose book, The Richard Nixon Snowglobe”, appeared on our doorstep with a little Post-It note saying “Review Me!” Okay, then. In Snowglobe, Loden rummages through the cobwebbed attic of history, blowing dust off yellowed inscriptions and occasionally trying on hats. And though her channeling of Politburo honchos, movie cowboys and vilified Commanders in Chief may be caricature, the portraits are not scrawled in the cartoonish exaggeration of ol’ Tommy Nast – she instead works with the contempt of the familiar. To Loden, these men appear not as black-hearted villains but as bewildered adherents to creaky ideology, veterans of futile wars both real and imagined. Richard Nixon, the frequent target, desperately clings to H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman and Charles W. Colson in “The Nixon Tapes”: Here we go. What in the name of Beelzebub that stands and sings all by itself, hacking the spade that rings against the rock? Is damn, twelve princesses dance their shoes and nobody is running their income tax
Seems like yesterday you broke out the Stoli Those were good times. The world on a razor comrade! you remember—we felt strangely free… I’m late to catch an Elks convention shambling laden with cheap “Elvis Meets Nixon” keychains Loden’s work isn’t all Nixonian. She delves into murder, Miss October and psychiatric study gone wrong. But regardless of subject matter, her knack is for producing emotion without stooping to melodrama. Throughout Snowglobe she is an insider – and when she refers to John Wayne by his birth name, it is done by someone who herself understands the value of a pen name. Read more articles in Arts » |
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