The bright, taut, explosive poems in Jordan Scott's Blert represent a
spelunk into the mouth of the stutterer. Through the unique symptoms of
the stutter (Scott, like fifty million others, has always stuttered),
language becomes a rolling gait of words hidden within words, leading to
different rhythms and textures, all addressed by the mouth's slight
erosions.
In Scott's lexicon, to blert is to stutter, to disturb the breath of
speaking. The stutter quivers in all that we do, from a skip on a CD to
a slip of the tongue. These experiences are often dismissed as aberrant,
but in Blert, such fragmented milliseconds are embraced and mined as
language. Often aimed full-bore at words that are especially difficult
for the stutterer, Scott's poems don't just discuss, they replicate the
act of stuttering, the 'blort, jam, and rejoice' involved in grappling
with the granular texture of words.