cover image Temporal Anomalies

Temporal Anomalies

Matt Broaddus. Ricochet, $16 trade paper (90p) ISBN 978-1-938900-49-5

The wry and expansive first collection from Broaddus explores Black identity and grapples with displacement and belonging in three sections evoking past, present, and future. In “Inheritance,” he writes: “I inherited a balcony—/ black sky, ocean wind—/ pushing deformation to the edges/ of the self I am sometimes, cannot be/ but when hailed, what hailed.” Elsewhere, this theme is explored figuratively, as in the prose sections of “Space Station”: “from portholes blackness looks in at me with many eyes.” Within these pages and reckonings, Broaddus makes room for playful, sonically rich poems, such as “The Magician”: “He licked a blue umbrella naughtily./ He did. I saw him./ The waiter asked him to refrain,/ but the water was cool,/ the spring rain.” The speaker’s voice in “Space Station” is often energetic and guiding: “Time is a long night I dance through. A tower I climb. A spiral staircase galaxy which ends somewhere I can’t predict. I judge by the food court. Food appears. I disappear it. I’m eating well.” Drawing variously from historical inquiry and science fiction, among other surprising motifs, Broaddus creates a voice and a geography all his own. (Sept.)