BOOKMONGER Poets write from life experiences Two Washington writers find their voice in retirement In the lush archipelago that occupies the mid-section of the Salish Sea, two poets are producing vibrant work in what we used to call the golden years of retirement. In a new poetry collection, “The Lesson of Plums,” Whidbey Island, Washington, poet Lois Parker Edstrom deftly mines that gold — which may be wisdom burnished by experience. In a poem called “Kintsugi,” she consid- ers the Japanese method of repairing cracks in broken ceramics with seams of gold, a practice that highlights the “flaws to add beauty / and, in so doing, the repaired ves- sel becomes / stronger.” Similarly, the title poem, a dreamy med- itation on illness, includes the detail of an over-ripe plum that bursts “its perfect pur- ple skin, / and sweetness, an amber rivulet, / crusts along the gash.” In “The Geometry of Faith,” Edstrom invokes “rich tapestries shot / with golden thread” and dreams of “galvanic charm / that glides out of sleep into the sunrise / of consciousness…” Edstrom’s poems ponder the passage of time in seasonal delights, beginnings and endings. The moments are precious, and the inevitable bittersweet is profound and sometimes generational. Along with acknowledgments of tran- sience, this collection also has odes to stub- born endurance, as in “The Over Sixty Soft- ball League.” In pieces like the delightful “Deep Thinker,” Edstrom extols the value of nur- turing a rich inner life. In “The Weight of Words,” Edstrom focuses on the power of language. Not too many miles away on the neigh- boring Fidalgo Island, Michael Daley also dedicates himself to poetry. As one of the co-founders of the seminal Empty Bowl Press back in the 1970s, Daley has pro- moted and published other poets for years. He worked in a Poet-in-the-Schools pro- gram before becoming a teacher and spend- ing more than 20 years teaching high school in Skagit County. Now retired from teaching, Daley con- tinues to write his own poems. His fifth poetry collection, “Born With,” is a com- pendium of the liveliest dirges you might 14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM ‘The Lesson of Plums’ is by Lois Parker Edstrom. This Week’s Books ‘Born With’ by Michael Daley Dos Madres Press — 106 pp — $19 ‘The Lesson of Plums’ by Lois Parker Edstrom MoonPath Press — 114 pp — $16 ever read, along with other pieces — some- times raging, sometimes keening with regret, but always bristling with detail. With references to mold-breakers such as photographer Alice Austen, rocker Jim Morrison and scientist Rachel Car- son, Daley writes poems about his own norm-shattering acts and those of his friends. It begins with the very first poem, “Among School Children,” and carries on through poems including “One for the Road.” He also tackles other harsh realities. “Tim Among the Mechanicals” ponders the death of a student. The brief poem “Song 49” begins with wolves but ends with what is too often the human condition and the haunting line: “no ‘Born With’ is by Michael Daley. one starving is ever free.” “A White Confession” is a self-critical reflection that presents a stinging scenario involving door-to-door salesmen, wasps and racism. Both “The Lesson of Plums” and “Born With” are worthwhile collections — each offers different lessons from lived experience. The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd McMichael, who writes this weekly column focusing on the books, authors and publish- ers of the Pacific Northwest. Contact her at bkmonger@nwlink.com