With a quiet eloquence, the poems in Long Walks in the Afternoon follow “the deep imagination’s long tap into the dark”—inward toward the still and radiant center of the self. But Margaret Gibson’s poetry is not self-serving or isolationist. She writes out of the firm conviction that our personal griefs hld energies that can move is to reach beyond ourselves and join with others in common struggle.
Beginning with poems that struggle against illusion, egotism, and emptiness, the collection progresses to poems that challenge violence—social violence against women, political violence in east Asia and Chilek and in “Radiation,” the violence that still reverberates from the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki:
We made the scars and the radiant air.
We made people invisible as numbers.
We did this.
In a final section, the desire to know and claim the self is transformed in a sequence of elegies into “the passion to lose myself in work” and in love and in the world—to be “no one.” The meditative mood of Gibson’s poems becomes a movement against isolation, a wrestle with our roots and common bonds, and a way of challenging the self to be more openly aligned with creative forces, and to speak out against dishonesty, injustice, chaos, and war.
Margaret Gibson, the poet laureate of Connecticut from 2019 to 2022, is the author of thirteen books of poems, including The Vigil, a finalist for the National Book Award. She has received grants from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Academy of American Poets. Her awards include the Lamont Selection, the Melville Kane Award, and the Connecticut Book Award. She is the editor of Waking Up to the Earth: Connecticut Poets in a Time of Global Climate Crisis.
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