HIDING FROM SALESMEN
ISBN: 978-0-9717265-2-9
Pub Date: Spring 2003
Pages: 88
By Scott Poole
Scott Poole's poems are witty, terse, irreverent, sad, and, mostly, totally unexpected. Hiding from Salesmen—such a great title, signals, accurately, original, delightful.
—Diana O'Hehir
It would be simple enough if all Poole were interested in was comic resistance to certain death-pulls in our culture. Instead, his speaker—a husband, a father, someone grateful for "reality's green backyard"—looks everywhere for signs of nobility and magic in human life. He finds it at a girl's soccer game, at the river's edge where lovers meet for picnics, at the scene of a terrorist attack. Under the beam of an MRI, the huge machine circling round him, "I let it register my love of baseball, / the friend I saved from drowning . . . / And I hoped / something greater than me / might show up on the screen." Just as the instrument searches within, the poems in Poole's book look out, tracking what is beautiful, useful, and true.
—Richard Robbins


