Description
Weaver’s Knot
by Glenda Bailey-Mershon
Full-length, Paper
$22.99
979-8-88838-282-0
2023
Weaver’s Knot immerses readers in the lives of textile mill workers, weavers, and needleworkers of Appalachia, and intrigues with the colorful tapestry of ethnic groups who mingle there. We are introduced to a traditional folksinger with a voice “granite rich and husky,” and a Romani poet who beguiles a bored coffeehouse audience with Manouche jazz. “Everything’s a song,” she says. “Mountain girls” skat, dance to rain drumming on city roofs, and sass strangers who try to seduce with cock-eyed complements. Here mountains settle around one’s shoulders like a familiar shawl, sacred streams flow with prayers, and grandmothers four generations removed sing echoing lullabies. Here also one finds love for humanity––”cunningly organized particles”—and devotion to the mountain “landscapes dipped in honey.”
Glenda Bailey-Mershon grew up at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains, among a textile-mill working and farming family with diverse roots. She lived for years in Chicago and Florida, and now has a home again in the Carolinas. Her work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including most recently Wagtail: The Roma Women’s Poetry Anthology (Butcher’s Dog, UK). She is also the author of Eve’s Garden, a novel about three generations of Romani women (Twisted Road). Her previous poetry publications include the chapbooks sa-co-ni-ge/blue smoke: Poems from the Southern Appalachians (Jane’s Stories); and Bird Talk (Wild Dove). She also edited four anthologies by women writers under the auspices of Jane’s Stories Press Foundation, which she co-founded.
Kirkus Reviews –
WEAVER’S KNOT
POEMS
BY GLENDA BAILEY-MERSHON ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
A nostalgic set of works that’s steeped in family history.
Bailey-Mershon presents a collection of poems about life in the Appalachian South.
The author waxes poetic about family and mountain living in this book. The speaker in “A Flatlander’s Mind Rests on Peaks,” for instance, refers to herself as a “writer born of blue lines, sheltered / since birth by sapphire mounds” who exiles herself to write, “Indigo ink spilling across a page.” She also recalls ancestors from a “land of butterflies and mists.” Another poem memorializes Viney Parker, a mountain-dweller with 16 children who founded a congregation. “The Hills’ Embrace” has the speaker tell of hiking in the mountains at different points in her life, feeling “Ghosts / swirl in the ebb of air–– wispy arms, / kisses soft as breath.” In “An Incantation for my Grandmothers,” the titular women must let go of their daughters, “feathers / tossed by angry winds, falling / lightly half a continent away”; in the title poem, though, the author acknowledges that “escape is not as simple / as saying good-bye.” “Back When I Was Juicy” recounts an early love affair with reading, while “Fertile Fields” deliciously describes the relief from a much-needed rainstorm. The few poems that turn attention away from the mountain landscape feel less profound. However, Bailey-Mershon’s details throughout the collection are tactile and often awe-inspiring, as when describing a grandmother’s “stiff hands / spinning, yarn spilling from pointed fingers” and a single mother with a “granite rich and husky” voice. Overcome with emotion while exploring Blue Spring Creek, another speaker feels “Words jam like logs in my throat.” The earth comes alive in a description of a mountain trail lined with “maples with the bark peeled back” and “mud-glazed pebbles” beside an “ancient spring,” and in another work, winter “arrives whistling like / a surprise we have coming.” The expansiveness of Appalachia and the wonder of family are also made clear: “Surely it’s / enough, on a cold winter eve, watching your own baby / sleep in a moon-blanketed room.”
A nostalgic set of works that’s steeped in family history.
Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: –
Publisher: N/A
Review Posted Online: Sept. 12, 2023
Review Program: KIRKUS INDIE
Categories:
LITERARY FICTION | GENERAL FICTION
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