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21st Century Wasteland BIRTH CHAOS DEATH is the sixth book of
poetry from Steven Michael Pape, one of England's leading young
voices.
A CLOSED MIND IS AN OPEN TRAP New And Selected Poems is a
collection of Steve Michael Pape's newest poetry combined with a
generous helping of the best poems from his previous collections,
as selected by the author. When he published "The Awakening Soul,
his first book of poetry, in October 2009, Steven Michael Pape
introduced himself to his readers by saying that he had been
writing poetry for 18 years. Eighteen years is a relatively long
time to be at your craft, especially when that time frame places
Mr. Pape's first poetic efforts at the tender age of seventeen. 17
is a pivotal age for a young person, then, now and in any era, in
this or any other century. And while many thoughtful adolescents
write poetry, most of them do not continue to do so for more than a
few years at most. They write until they feel that they have
properly vented their innermost thoughts or until they are
distracted by family, careers, video games or other worthwhile
pursuits available in the twenty-first century. So here is Steven
Michael Pape still at it, his soul still awakening, still believing
in the potency of the spoken word: "This is the spoken word, and
this is the truth An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth"
................................................... "Some of them
real and some dredged from the depths There are tales of life and
then tales of death." There are many poems here about life, death,
and death in life, and life in death. The death in life poems are
mainly about the machine, a recurring concept which seems to
describe the lot of the present day working class young Englishman:
"We are part of the machine Rusted by the sweat of innocents Held
conscious by our thoughts." But then: "Some refuse the control,
Militant minds in chaos united Trying to overthrow the machine."
Innocence is another recurring theme, in both the new poems and in
the selected, older poems. Despite the raging unemployment, the
unpaid bills, the despair he sees everywhere in his native land,
Mr. Pape finds solace in the word itself, in the memories of his
own innocent times and in the faces of the children, just born and
yet to be born, for whose future he is both cautiously optimistic
and solicitous. While there is no more than a slight glimmer of
hope in the poems about his city, there is something of a ragged
beauty to be found there, amongst the stark, realistic observations
he makes of the streets he walks daily. Much more beauty, hope and
enlightenment appear in the frequent poems about nature, about the
night and the moonlight: "Vibrant bright full moon tonight It's
everywhere in my sight Eclipsing heaven with its glow Encased by
planets with its show. A vast light bulb in the black sky Just a
hint of cloud covers the eye Mysterious night full of desire
Brightest midnight do not expire." This is a poet, who has come
into his own, who writes out of anger, despair, love of family,
love of nature and his own observing mind observing his soul
observing itself: "People are born as others die, It's all the same
in my minds' eye Buddhists teach of being reborn, A pretty girl, a
rose, a thorn." In the poem, An American in Paris, which ends with
the lines, Le poete est mort, Le poete est mort, Mr. Pape also
writes: "Tonight will be his calling, the day of his rebirth In an
upstairs apartment as the night draws still He feels the end
approaching, he is ready The strangest life he has ever known." No
doubt. you will come to the same conclusion when you have read and
re-read and digested the poems in this fine collection by a richly
talented and devoted writer: Le poete est vivant
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