With Nathaniel Mackey's fifth collection of poems, Nod House, we
witness a confluence of music and meaning unprecedented in American
poetry. Mackey's art continues to push the envelope of what is possible
to map and remap through words in sounds and sounds in words. Picking up
with Nub's disintegration at the end of his previous collection -- the
National Book Award-winning Splay Anthem -- we follow a traveler and a
tribe of travelers ensconced in myth and history as Mackey continues to
weave his precisely measured music with two ongoing serial poems, Song
of the Andoumboulou and Mu. The collec- tion is divided into two
sections, both titled "Quag," and it is this double-Quag ("Nub's new
colony Quag" or Qraq or Ouab'da or Quaph . . .) that the tribe is exiled
in, worlds within alternate worlds where names and places are
ever-shifting, and dreamlessness reigns. From the pyramids to the
projects, Ivory Coast to Lone Coast, Lagos to Stick City, amidst
chorusing horns and star-spar lightning, Nod House ("Nub's / new /
address") unfolds as gorgeous eulogy, copla-cuts of deep song, the long
elegiac march of "day after day of the dead."