Tim Tomlinson, “Yolanda: An Oral History in Verse” (Finishing Line Press, 2015) - a podcast by Marshall Poe

from 2021-01-31T22:10:42.023393

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Think of a place you have visited and to which you feel a connection. Now think of that place in utter ruin and devastation mere months later. You feel a pull, a pull to return, to help, and to make sense of the heavy fist nature can bring down on us at any time. Tomlinson personally gathered hours upon hours of eye-witness accounts, conversations, and testimonies. Translated and then transcribed, he pulled the poems directly from the transcriptions, as a sculptor would uncover a human form from within a block of marble. These poems go beyond what we understand as “poems of witness” and become “poems of testimony,” life rendered into verse in the purest sense.

we saw the barge

as well as the darkening of the world

my house was nothing

the barge was on top of our house

and the houses were gone

my house it was nothing anymore

a little portion of a steel bar

Through the disassociation needed to survive such trauma and begin to reshape rubble into a life, moments of clarity and realization are apparent, he lifts these moments so that we may see them clearly. This collection is labor of devotion and should be celebrated. Tomlinson reminds us that art is life, elevated.
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