INCOMPLETE STRANGERS
ISBN: 978-0-9883166-3-8
Pub Date: Mar. 2013
Pages: 78
By Robert McNamara
The title of Robert McNamara’s book—Incomplete Strangers—recalls the name wily Odysseus gives Polyphemus—he is, he says, “No-Man.” For McNamara, we are “incomplete strangers,” never entirely strangers and never complete beings, ever journeying out and back for images to fill the holes we can never patch. McNamara’s poems are about how we experience those recurrent moments, how we recognize ourselves as avatars of the permanent, what that feels like, the prosody and measure of it, its sixes and sevens, how we marshal our experience, our desire for perfection, and then launch into the rain, knowing it’s all temporary, knowing the fathers we learned from in the Eden of New York City when men who took their boys on Saturdays to museums to encourage their imaginations have at last burnt out, muttering curses into subways, knowing that we had to surpass them even as in our dreams we longed for them to call us from whatever dying beds for one last reminder of how sweet, how contingent, how temporary they are and everything around us is, even our gods, even the language we would like to think is immortal and through which we think we can claim immortality for ourselves and those we love and those we lost. The crowning climax of the book is a sequence of “Skeptical Psalms,” a fugue on the old questions, wherein we try to understand what evil is . . . addressing that something more than us to which we speak as “You,” as “Lord,” as “God,” as “You, here, as long as I speak of you” and to which we do not need to speak when the radiance of things, “what shines and gleams,” “all flashes and specks,” as in a pied poem by Gerard Manley Hopkins, comes out of hiding as the greengrocer tears off the dross under Roman skies of artichokes like a genius editor and baptizes the lettuce in a Bernini fountain before setting them like chapters in the racks of her stall for all to marvel at. All those delicacies and more await you. Open the book.
—William Tremblay


