Book Review: A Form of Optimism by Roy Jacobstein

"A form of optimism" must be what poetry is to Roy Jacobstein, a public health physician who travels the world and has seen suffering. He writes of these experiences, as in his poem "HIV Needs Assessment": "We've found needs aplenty./But let's not talk about that,/as the people do not." Jacobstein and his colleagues are rendered mute in the face of desperation. What can anyone say that would make things better? Nothing. But one can capture the moment in verse, and remind the world of what it's like.

And that seems to be what this book of poetry is about: not saving the world, but showing it to us, in small glimpses - the awful and the everyday. There are slices of Jacobstein's own life: his mother, whose name meant "mother" in Arabic; the scariest movie he ever saw as a child; his malamute-border collie mix dog; his observations of Greece and Turkey. He shows a depth of knowledge of the world and its literature (and for those of us not quite so well-read, there are some explanations of the titles of some of the poems at the end), but that doesn't mean he won't compose a poem about the Three Stooges ("Moe"). There is also the stark and moving "Immortality," in which Jacobstein lists the names of gun designers, whose immortality means death. 

Topically, I enjoyed the poems that arise out of Jacobstein's personal history the best, but it's where he goes with them that makes them work. In "Sighting," he ponders noses and recalls an incident in Italy many years ago, where two widows decide he has a Jewish nose. The poem starts out with his memory of a clown nose, but by the end wends its way to the "fatal science," concluding, "and the Aquiline nose of Sheba, so long/admired in the West, marked the Tutsi in Rwanda for the machete and the grave." Jacobstein uses personal anecdotes to bridge the distance from the personal to the universal.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2

Article tags

Spread the word
Bookmark and Share
Profile image for nancy-fontaine

Article Author: Nancy Fontaine

Nancy Fontaine is a librarian and freelance writer living in New Hampshire with her husband, two cats, and every four years during presidential primary season, the national press.

Visit Nancy Fontaine's author pageNancy Fontaine's Blog

Read comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own

Article comments

  • 1 - Natalie Bennett

    Mar 21, 2007 at 8:02 pm

    This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States. Nice work!

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed.
Please read our comment policy.
Please preview your comment.

blogcritics lists for Nov 29, 2009

fresh articles Most recent articles site-wide

fresh comments Most recent comments site-wide

most comments Most comments in 24hrs

top writers Most prolific Blogcritics for October

top commenters Most prolific Commenters in 24 hrs