We must want the right things and we must want them the right way. The correct kind of happiness threatens us with suburban homes, cars, dogs, children playing in front yards. In a vicious act of rebellion, Domenica Martinello demolishes the delusions of this capitalist pastoral in Good Want.
Good Want
Domenica Martinello
Coach House Books
$23.95
paper
112pp
9781552454824
Martinello makes visible the sparse offerings for the many in this economy, and she embraces some deeper questions unearthed in the process. What are we left to believe in, if we are only allowed to desire specific things in a specific manner? It is no coincidence that biblical references and confessional modes permeate this collection. The speaker’s honesty is uncompromising and points out a dangerous nothingness behind all struggle, as even “Money can’t buy class. / It’s inherited genetically.” There is no out for anyone, not even those who champion financial success.
Poem by poem, the book reckons with exhaustion, expectations, the frustrations of city life, of work, of being a partner, of being defined by a myriad of imposed norms. This critique culminates in the title piece – which earned its author the Malahat Review’s Long Poem Prize – in which we learn that “Good is what happens / when you stretch God too far” and that “Want is what happens. […] Next comes shame.” Perhaps almost ironically, given its insistence that genuine creativity is impossible under the system it convincingly rejects, Good Want is a gripping and destructive blow of poetic resistance.mRb
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