The Shine Poems

The Shine Poems - Cover

by Calvin Forbes

64 pages / 6.00 x 9.00 inches / no illustrations

Poetry

Hardcover / 9780807126660 / February 2001

Shine is an African American folk character who emerged after World War I in toasts, blues, folk poetry, and children’s rhymes. In his new book of poems, Calvin Forbes reinvents Shine, giving him a girlfriend, Glow, and a child, Shade. He renders the figure more melancholy and adds traces of the surreal and slapstick—accessories “typical of the folk dibbling and dabbling as the tradition is passed along.”

While only the last quarter of The Shine Poems concern Shine, all of the poems reflect a similar sensibility. They share the narrative threads of family relationships and personal and social history while they test the full possibilities of colloquial language and speech rhythms in verse. With its songs, blues, and quick, witty epigrams, The Shine Poems is a collection clear, firm, funny, and playful even as it takes that inevitable turn in the road toward the somber. Lyrical yet highly formalized—“simplicity shacked up with complexity,” as Forbes puts it—these poems resemble the Jess B. Simple short stories of Langston Hughes and take inspiration from the Henry poems of John Berryman, the Crazy Jane poems of W. B. Yeats, and the poetry of Sterling Brown.

Shine, Shine where you been—
Back and around the world again.
I’ve seen things that best remain unsaid.
One sure thing I learned: KISS
ASS and you shall receive.

Calvin Forbes 's first book of poems is Blue Monday. He is an associate professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he teaches writing, literature, and jazz history.

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