By Pamela L. Laskin
Whether her poems
remain close to home among her loved ones, venture out into the urban
streetscape, or explore the world's terrains of trauma, Pamela L. Laskin's
concerns are united by her forthright gaze at the human body - frail,
endangered, but consistently resilient. She offers us a deep and serious
engagement with our moments of change, of vulnerability and her natural
sympathy allows her to embrace, with respect and care, our most elemental
and challenging experiences. Best of all, her vision evinces the optimism
that arises out of close and conscientious attention; for Laskin, the
poet must "refuse to believe/in permanent stains." We can all be grateful
for her bold, delicate and affirming poems.
David Groff, Theory of Devolution
Yes, in a collection called Secrets of Sheets, you might expect
mention of laundry, as well as everything else that haunts our
days, and true to poet/wife/mother Pam Laskin's expansive heart,
that laundry includes the metaphoric and the actual - from the
son's and daughter's, which transforms into "Dry Cleaners" upon the
daughter's graduation, to "Other People's Laundry," to "no laundry" in "Darfur." Laskin
refuses to believe in "permanent stains." Yet, at her tough best, she can also
write in the found poem "Away":
"She was learning disabled
so I shot her
through her heart....
I didn't want her to die,
I just wanted to stop
being her mother...."
Pam Laskin will make you wince in recognition, and laugh in recognition, but
don't worry; she'll protect you, too.
Estha Weiner, Editor, Blues for Bills
ISBN: 978-0-911051-6-67
80 pages
This product was added to our catalog on Friday 06 February, 2009.