Friday, July 18, 2008 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
Book Review
"Hardheaded Weather": Desires unmet across the great racial divide
In "Hardheaded Weather," poet Cornelius Eady vividly explores issues of racial division in American life.
Special to The Seattle Times
"Hardheaded Weather"
by Cornelius Eady
Putnam, 204 pp., $25.95
In "Discourse of the Young Poem," first published in 1980, poet Cornelius Eady wants "something different," such as "poems / To metamorphose / Into paintings!" and "A close-up / Of the face of God / On every television / In the nation." But before all that comes to pass, he says, he wants "Money for reading poems."
Almost three decades later, that last desire seems to have been fulfilled. Cornelius Eady is now a professor of English at the University of Notre Dame and has won many awards, including prizes from the Academy of American Poets and the Guggenheim Foundation. And on the evidence of the finely crafted, wide-ranging poems collected in "Hardheaded Weather," he has come about as close to fulfilling those other wishes as a poet is likely to get.
More accurately, perhaps, Eady succeeds in making us feel what it's like to have so many desires go unfulfilled. In "Sherbet," he describes the experience of "A black man with / A white wife" awaiting service "like a criminal" in a hotel restaurant in the South. He watches the waitress as she ignores them, and he wonders
What poetry
Could describe the
Perfect angle of
This woman's back as
She walks, just so,
Mapping the room off
![]()
Like the end of a border dispute ...
That "border dispute" never really ends, and Eady depicts its casualties in the poems collected here from his 2001 volume, "Brutal Imagination." All of these poems are written in the voice of "the young, nonexistent black man Susan Smith claimed kidnapped her children." (In the notorious South Carolina murder case Eady references, the children were later found dead in Smith's car, which she had dumped in a reservoir, apparently because her lover made getting rid of the children a condition for continuing their relationship.) How much of the experience of being black is, after all, the invention of the white imagination?
Like a bad lover, she has given me a poisoned heart,
It pounds both our ribs, black, angry, nothing but business.
Since her fear is my blood
And her need part mythical,
Everything she says about me is true.
Among the many harrowing things said about race, none strikes the heart more powerfully than Eady's poems.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Bellevue-born author/photographer goes to the birds
American Life in Poetry: Pat Mora's "Fences"
Book review: "The Hour I First Believed": Too much of too many bad things
Book review: "American Lion" examines the life and leadership of Andrew Jackson

This feature requires Flash 7.
Top video | World | Science / Tech | Entertainment
pets

pet listings
| ||
free speech
- When a dog gets yelled at and... (8 replies)
- Good Bothell/North Seattle Vet (10 replies)
- Best way to keep young cats off... (18 replies)
Post a forum topic
families

editors' picks
More Families Guidesfree speech
- Adventures for Couples (0 replies)
- The Zombies are Coming, the... (0 replies)
Post a forum topic
neighborhoods

Hot chefs are setting the Seattle restaurant scene ablaze
More Neighborhoods
happenings
More Georgetown / South Seattle eventsfree speech
- Welcome to the Georgetown /... (3 replies)
- Anywhere to dance Salsa? (13 replies)
Post a forum topic
- JPMorgan cutting 3,400 Seattle jobs
- WaMu to lay off 3,400 in Seattle; bank to empty most of its leased space downtown
- College Football | With UW, Pat Hill says he had "great" talk
- Cougar fans nip at request for Husky Stadium funds
- Wal-Mart worker trampled to death by frenzied Black Friday shoppers
- Boy's archery death accidental, coroner says
- Star Times | Football: Offense
- UW to get close look at Jeff Tedford
- Bush: `I'm sorry' the economic crisis is occurring
- US cruise ship outruns Somali pirates' guns
- JPMorgan cutting 3,400 Seattle jobs
- WaMu to lay off 3,400 in Seattle; bank to empty most of its leased space downtown
- Canada's oil-sands boom creates vast riches and a dirty footprint
- Meteorologist Cliff Mass examines Pacific Northwest weather in his new book
- UW uses artwork to help sharpen visual skills of future doctors
- Wal-Mart worker trampled to death by frenzied Black Friday shoppers
- Recycling fees may rise as demand, prices drop
- Cougar fans nip at request for Husky Stadium funds
- Gregoire looking at massive state budget cuts
- 2 homeless women back on their feet for Seattle Marathon

