Tag: Jim Harrison

Do the ‘Dead Man’s Float’ with us on March 26 to honor Jim Harrison

If you stick around the store long enough, you’ll hear John talk about Jim Harrison. The average time span for this happening is 5.68 minutes. I’ve timed it.

And if you read any of Harrison’s work, especially, his poetry, you’ll understand why. It’s meditative, but not intimidating. Funny, but not flippant. In his last book, Dead Man’s Float, he thinks a lot about mortality—particularly his own—without being morbid. Let’s take a look at his short poem “Birds.”

The birds are flying around frantically
in the thunderstorm that just began, the
first in weeks and weeks. They are enjoying
themselves. I think I’ll join them.

I like this poem because of how much work it can do, depending on what you’re looking for. It can either be a lighthearted quick glimpse out of a window through which we see a storm-littered yard punctuated with birds playing and a grown man frolicking in a sort of second childhood. And/or/also, we can view Harrison’s signature focus on birds and landscapes as a longing for purity, for a spiritual weightlessness freed from the burdens of life itself: a mashup of Dickinson’s “Hope is a thing with feathers that perches on the soul” and Keats’ nightingale that sings because it doesn’t live in a space “Where palsy shakes a few, sad, last gray hairs, Where youth grows pale, and spectre-thin, and dies.” These birds are boundless, and Harrison wants that same freedom. He’s welcoming flying from this earth. Again, as Dickinson says, “from the earth, the light balloon asks nothing but release.”

Jim Harrison knew he was dying when he wrote the poems in Dead Man’s Float. The grace with which he accepts his very end is comforting, but not all of the poems are about his life’s sunset. In another imitating-animals move, the poem “Mad Dog,” Harrison tells us that he “envied the dog lying in the yard,” so he lies down with it, rolling around, unable to find the same level of blissful comfort that his canine counterpart does. We’ve all been here: trying to make ourselves happy but blocked by ourselves. It’s funny, tongue in cheek, light.

On March 26, on the third anniversary of Jim Harrison’s death, fans of Harrison will gather at the bookstore and read aloud from Dead Man’s Float. Join us. You don’t have to read aloud, or even be an expert in poems. Show up and listen. Jim would approve.

Night Hunt
–for Jim Harrison

Through winter-thin trees,
an owl’s empty calls echoes.
No bird to be seen, but
in this near dusk, I hear it—
a clear tunnel of sound.

Branch-rustle and swoop,
the quiet snatch of talons
on ground. One less field
mouse. Silence. Then
the cold song resumes.

-Jamie Dickson

A tribute to Jim Harrison by Barry Gifford

jim harrison by barry gifford

Jim Harrison

I miss Jim Harrison
not just his new poems and novels
he won’t write,
his blind, wandering left eye,
gargantuan appetite, his generosity–
He loved Mary Lou’s flowers,
sitting in our garden–
He’d never been to a racetrack
so I took him, taught him
how to read The Racing Form,
how to bet–we both won
a little that day–
He’d call me after midnight,
I could hear the ice clink
in his glass of Scotch
before the gravelly voice–
He’d never fail to mention
Mary Lou’s flowers in letters,
on the phone and when we met–
When I was in my twenties
he told me, “If you lived in New York
you’d already be a famous poet.”
Walking on his property near
the Arizona-Mexico border
he brushed away a rattlesnake
with his cane–“I don’t
shoot snakes any more,” he said
“unless I have to, like
writing poems.”
He died two years ago–
Mary Lou’s flowers are beautiful
this year, Jim, especially
the blue irises.

-BARRY GIFFORD

 

John Evans met the author and poet Jim Harrison (1937-2016) about 37 years ago, before the publication of Warlock, and John met Barry Gifford about 30 years ago, and developed a friendship with both. Barry and John shared much respect for Jim’s work and formed a bond this way. Barry has shared this as yet unpublished poem with John to share with the Lemuria community. Both authors have been great friends of the store, and have enriched its shelves with their magnificent words.

Jim Harrison (L); Barry Gifford (R)

Jim Harrison (L); Barry Gifford (R)

Jim Harrison wrote many novels, volumes of poetry, and collections of non-fiction, including his last works, The Big 7 and Dead Man’s Float. Barry Gifford has also written many novels, volumes of poetry, and collections of non-fiction, including his most recent work, The Cuban Club.

Undeclared: ‘The English Major’ by Jim Harrison

By Katie Magee

If you know John Evans, Lemuria’s owner, then you know that he is a huge fan and friend of Jim Harrison. A few months back, John mentioned that he was planning on re-reading Harrison’s stuff. I had not read any, so I asked if I could tag along on his little literary adventure. John obliged and the first leg of our trip was The English Major, a novel Harrison published in 2008. This book is the story of a retired English teacher-turned-farmer, Cliff, whose wife, Vivian, decides she is going to leave him for someone else.

english majorCliff, having become increasingly disappointed in the names of the states and names of the state birds in the United States, decides this is a perfect time to travel around the entire country and rename both of these things. With him, he carries a puzzle of the fifty states and as he leaves each state he tosses the puzzle piece in a place of his choice.

Somewhere about Montana, Cliff and an old student of his, Marybelle, decide they should meet up. This meeting leads to Marybelle traveling with Cliff for a little while. Marybelle is an extremely estranged woman with an unhealthy obsession with her cellphone and a fictional son that she speaks of as if he is real. Cliff’s trip is supposed to help him figure out his next step in life, figure out what to do with the rest of his time, but Marybelle very much hinders his soul search.

Besides Marybelle, we spend a good but of time with Cliff’s friend AD (Alcoholic Doctor) who he goes on a fishing trip with in Montana. Along the way, we also meet Cliff and Vivian’s son, Robert, who is a big shot in San Francisco. To me, the most interesting visiting characters you get to know are Bert and his girlfriend Sandra. Bert owns a snake farm and Sandra is an ex-meth addict who sometimes shoots coyotes out of the upstairs window.

Cliff, eventually returning back to Michigan where he started his journey, seems to have come to terms with his new life. I so thoroughly enjoyed traveling around the states with Cliff and meeting the various interesting people he has shared his life with. If you are like me and you haven’t read any Harrison, this book is a wonderful introduction to Jim’s world. If you are like John and you have read all the Harrison that is out there…twice, pick up this one for a third time.

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