Barb’s Wordy Blurbs: Glass Awash by Ken Gierke

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         What immediately impresses the reader is the cover, which displays stones hewn into glass by water and time. Different shades of blue and green, shaped into tears. On the back cover, one stone, a ruby, represents the heart embraced by shadows. When I open the book to view the front and back cover, I can trace a heart around the polished stones.

         These images embody the theme of Ken Gierke’s collection of poems, Glass Awash (Spartan Press, 2022): His story of loss, grief, and recovery. As Gierke writes in the book’s epigraph, β€œEven burnished glass will retain its luster/ when viewed in the proper light. / So it is with memories.”

         The early poems prepare us for his impending loss of his mother with riddles and paradoxes. In β€œWrestlution”, Gierke navigates his feelings on β€œthese paths / life’s threads, often tangled”. He β€œwrestles with knots”. When facing loss, we often first look into the mind, the meaning of life, but the soul answers the questions. In β€œSlow Descent into Darkness”, the poet asks, β€œDoes hardship serve a purpose?” The poem replies,” A thousand butterflies cannot carry the world.”

         Gierke explores loss with imagery from nature. β€œDrought in the Depth of Marianas”, loss is a β€œdrought of imagination” with β€œlittle hope of recovery” He describes his loss as the sea walking and taking the shore with it. In β€œOut of Touch”, he finds himself in a haze with time slipping away like the waves. β€œPast and future out of reach / the present slips away / with each passing moment.”

         In subsequent poems, loss brings him into himself, his β€œgut hollowed” (β€œHollow Man”). He searches for β€œa way out of this darkness” even though he has the sense he is β€œreaching into” it (β€œReaching”). He is then like a wave both extending to shore and receding into the dark waters. Loss becomes oppressive tinnitus, β€œThe hiss of breaking / foam, the last trace of a receding wave.”

         β€œIn Search of Clarity”, the poet takes us on a walk, β€œWondering if the next turn / will bring the answer”. His pending loss becomes the hulk of a” bridge”. His hope in β€œunwound” dissolves as β€œfragments, scattered / like bits of a broken shell”. On his journey into loss in β€œcinder and ash”, love is β€œwasted, scattered / by careless steps / cinder and ash”. He feels at a loss in β€œStranded”, β€œNo course set in a mind / looking back for direction.” In β€œMy Road Not Taken”, he resolves that loss is his fate.

         As Gierke faces the death of his mother, he becomes β€œan empty canvas” because his words and thoughts are unable to control his mother’s destiny. The loss of a mother is emblematic of all deep loss. He holds his dying mother in the arms of his memories. His mother is his β€œMantle”; her life β€œthe lesson that will guide me / through your coming absence”. As grief descends in β€œFrailty”, he holds his mother’s hand, and she becomes his companion in loss.

         Death is a dream concerto in β€œAsleep with Grieg”, one of the most powerful poems in this collection. Passing in and out of sleep as he holds his mother’s hand, Gierke hears various piano compositions of Grieg. The music both comforts and cuts. While he is soothed by Morning Mood, The Death of Ace signals the pain of his grief’s knife slicing the neck.

         Grief is not linear; it has stages. After his mother’s death, while Gierke finds strength in the memories that become β€œVisions of Absence”, in β€œInclinations”, he still feels rudderless β€œas water continues / to flow, // or fails to fall.” In β€œUntapped” he writes,

Like tears denied,

a cistern lies

empty.

With rain comes balance,

and healing begins.

Welcome tears.

         Even music returns in β€œAdiagio for Spring” with memory’s knife β€œtracing old scars”. He finds comfort in the stars, and this imagery of light becomes β€œRuby-throated Fondness”, dancing hazel eyes, like hummingbirds hovering at a feeder.

         Woven throughout the poems in this section is light, which becomes bright skies, unfolding possibilities, and acceptance of loss. In β€œVantage” he feels no regrets and drops the weight of grief. His heart is open, ready for sensual potential, a tsunami, which immerses him β€œInto the Blue”. Here the poetic form breaks into wave-like lines, surging with new love, transmuting β€œStone to Flesh”.

         The imagery of stones being caressed by time into glass in the poems of resolution brings us full circle to the book’s signature poem, β€œGlass Awash”. Afterall, the healing path is circular. In β€œOther Voices”, we are with the poet sifting β€œthrough stones / at the water’s edge, trying to find / that one that speaks” to us. By so doing, we are creating the glass of our healing. The stones (our memories),

Tumbling again

and again, nudged

finally to lie

beneath the drying sun.

          In the final poems, we are taken β€œOut of the Rain” into the dawn of a new love, with β€œβ€¦eyes / blazing the way, unraveling / the thread of this labyrinth” (β€œSolace for Theseus”).

         For the poet, loss becomes illusory. The past holds stories like stones in the palm of its hand, β€œthoughts jumbled / memory just a memory” (β€œMemory’s Stones”). He can β€œchoose the way forward /dare to dream / love life” (β€œThe Journey”).

         In the last poem, β€œAgeless”, Gierke realizes that β€œeven decay // and loss can lead to growth…..// beginnings never really end”.  If we trace our fingers around a stone hewn into glass repeatedly and without pause, we can agree.

         I highly recommend Ken Gierke’s collection, Glass Awash. Many of us can relate to this universal theme: facing loss, navigating grief, and transmuting pain with new love. We all hold and tumble past memories until they shimmer with hope.

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15 responses to “Barb’s Wordy Blurbs: Glass Awash by Ken Gierke”

  1. Carol anne Avatar

    Sounds like a wonderful collection of poetry! I’ll definitely check it out! X

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      Thank you, Carol Anne!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. robbiesinspiration Avatar

    Hi Barbara, thank you for this lovely review of Ken’s book. You have reminded me I have this as a paperback. I have yours next, the Nolcha’s, then Ray’s then this one.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      Awesome, Robbie! I appreciate you!

      Liked by 2 people

  3. Ken Gierke / rivrvlogr Avatar

    Thank you for such an in-depth review of Glass Awash. There is always more to life than grief, but that in no way negates it. Compartmentalizing it may sound like a simplification, but we never forget our losses.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      You’re so welcome, Ken! I agree. I feel it’s crucial to face grief and study it. Our culture seems to want us to repress it so that we can move on. Everyone deals with loss differently, though. Repression can create more problems than just the loss itself.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. T. W. Dittmer Avatar

    Wow, Barbara! The heartfelt wisdom is so well-expressed!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      Ken’s great at that. Thank you!

      Liked by 2 people

  5. Susi Bocks Avatar

    I love your review, and you are so right about his talent, Barbara! He contributes a lot to The Short of It, and I’m so glad he’s been a supporter for so long!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Meelosmom Avatar

      He’s a Missouri poet, like us! We should get together. 😊

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Susi Bocks Avatar

        It might have to be a long weekend because I’m in Kansas. πŸ™‚

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Meelosmom Avatar

        Oh, I forgot that. πŸš— πŸš—πŸš—

        Liked by 2 people

      3. Susi Bocks Avatar

        No worries! They are about the same anyway.

        Liked by 1 person

      4. Meelosmom Avatar

        True. Just a little farther.

        Liked by 2 people

      5. Susi Bocks Avatar

        Yep

        Liked by 1 person

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