| A Review of: False Memory by Kevin HigginsFalse Memory, the new collection by Conductors of Chaos contributor
Tony Lopez, is certainly experimental, but it's an experiment carried
out under strictly controlled conditions-the collection consist of
eleven sets of ten unrhymed (mostly alexandrine) sonnets-and the
results are impressive. Throughout the book, Lopez re-contextualises
the debased vocabularies of the financial, scientific, academic and
political worlds in order to make the reader rethink the ways in
which language can be used. Phrases like "This may involve
some unforeseen social costs" and "Managers of personal
equity plans / Ended the week with a bounce" are scattered
throughout, giving the poems the feel of a monologue best read in
a disembodied, machine-like voice.
But I am perhaps giving the wrong impression here, since Lopez is
a poet with a highly developed sense of humour, and he uses the
bizarre juxtapositioning of these found phrases to occasionally
hilarious effect: "Most molecular data points towards / A lack
of interest among teenage voters / In Ms Windsor and her relatives."
It's true that as one reads through this (fairly relentless)
collection, it begins to seem like the poetic accompaniment to the
music of Philip Glass. This, from "Corneal Erosion":
And I don't see how we can win. The first faint
Intermittent soundings of the sirens may be
ignored
Just as the slogans came through the unpractised
speech.
In Arcadia, when I was there, I did not see
hammering stone
But you should vacate the building when you
hear
A continuous note. It is best to move away-
Best to pay bills by direct debit and avoid offices.
Water bombs, I hear, are great fun and completely
harmless...
And on it goes, for a hundred and ten pages. But False Memory is
far from being one of those worthy-but-dull experiments which
avant-garde poets are so adept at producing. Lopez pulls off the
almost impossible by managing to be both linguistically experimental
and very entertaining.
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