Jeffrey Skinner's poems come at the world from many different
directions. Some are outrageous and very funny, like "Experiment," which
begins, "I sewed my father into a specially designed, handmade bear
suit. He was indistinguishable from a real bear, and yet retained the
necessary functions of a human. I also provided a G.P.S. radio collar.
Then I air-dropped him into a densely forested preserve. When I returned
a year later I found he had mated with an Asian black bear. He and she
and their two cubs lived a quiet life in a mountain cave." In other
poems, Skinner explores more familiar domestic landscapes, taking us
with great tenderness and precision into the life of the human heart. By
turns poignant, brainy, and hilarious, Salt Water Amnesia is a book
that will surprise and delight.
Reading the Bay
A calm water morning. After what was said on both sides.
Don't you talk to me that way. My daughter.
We cannot speak, now, nor stand to touch.
The bay, covered with tiny script
Moving rapidly right to left. Words
Crossing over
One another, whole passages
Torn from an asylum diary. I lifted her
Body, a huge flailing penknife, into the car.
A seagull sits bobbing on the text. My brother.
It appears that, today at least, all language moves out to sea.
Jeffrey Skinner has published four collections of poetry: Late
Stars, A Guide to Forgetting, The Company of Heaven, and Gender
Studies. His work has received wide recognition, including fellowships
from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ingram Merrill Foundation,
and the Howard Foundation. Currently director of the creative writing
program at the University of Louisville, he is also co-founder and
editorial consultant for Sarabande Books.