A Review of Timothy Liu's Hard Evidence
Timothy Liu, Hard Evidence. Talisman House Publishers, PO Box 3157, Jersey
City, NJ 07303-3157. $14.95. 112 pp.
Timothy Liu has the courage to fit his stylistic diversity
within the covers of a single collection of poems. Hard Evidence, Liu’s
fourth and strongest book, is intriguingly divided between narrative/lyric
poems that ably use conventional resources and disjunctive, collagistic
experiments, both brief and extended, that often resemble work published
by The Figures, Sun & Moon, and his current press, Talisman House.
In his prior collection, Say Goodnight (1998),
Liu achieves some of his most salient effects by accumulating diverse
tropes and images that culminate in the buildup of a reasonably coherent
narrative (sometimes satirical), elegiac plaint, or lyric rumination.
Hard Evidence also features numerous notable examples of poetry in this
vein, including “To Zion” (65), a wildly satirical exposure
of Mormon Elders’ pederastic exploits, the cyber-age-inflected “Next
Day” (80), “Consolation” (97), a moving elegy to the
poet’s mother, “Many Mansions” (109), a critique of
Yuppie bricolage, and “Middle-Class Realia as Iconographic Vanitas”
(110), a traipse through the labyrinths of current commodity fetishism.
The implications of AIDS for gay males is rendered poignantly in “Coup
de Grace,” which begins by presenting the irony of how a single
sexual encounter may cancel years of athletic training: “Bodies
made solid by weights succumb/ to illness. Years of focussed practice//
lost in that afternoon of neglect” (13). Multiple meaning is an
important aspect of all of Liu’s poetry; here, considering that
the poem was probably written in the late nineties, “focussed practice”
is not only readable as weightlifting, but “safe sex.” The
careful, restrained articulation of a catalog in the couplets of “Coup
de Grace” embodies Liu’s ability to produce elegies tinged
with both sincerity and social irony:
What we are felt after the fact--
walls with his name graffitied on them,
late night actors who could’ve been
his double. Dolls left in a drawer
unopened for years like those boxes
of books in the attic that became
our inheritance. The things loved least
loved at last. Weather vanes renewed
by wind. But the former tenants are gone.
Our words a bridge. Just as my kiss
once sealed the tomb of his empty mouth. (13)
When Liu pursues such themes
as the relations of eros and transience in more experimental poems, such
as “Nostalgia” (6), “Noli Me Tangere” (81), and
“Hard Evidence” (49), referential force and emotional intensity
are maintained. In the book’s title-poem, while the setting of a
single room in one sense unifies the disparate tropes and images in the
different sentences/ one-line stanzas, ambiguities of reference and of
what is inside and outside an individual subjectivity enrich the push/pull
between and among lines:
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