A new book of poetry by Schumacher celebrates the natural world and human life.
What metaphor is more potent for the human life cycle and the composition of our legacies than a garden? In the author’s seventh collection, the garden is a place to take stock of one’s life, to harvest “sheaves of ideas…mounds of wise messages…clusters of kindness” (“Harvest Gift”) and move forward nourished by gratitude and compassion. The poetry has clear influences from Shakespeare, the Romantic poets, and Whitman, conjuring strong emotions and self-reflection via natural imagery. Schumacher describes her style as “word music” and frames many of her poems with rhyme schemes and meters to buoy the consistent message of embracing life’s challenges as opportunities to bloom, as distilled in the ending line of the poem “Memorial Contemplation”: “We may not always choose what’s good, / we may not always understand, / but wisdom comes with trying / to do the best we can.” One poem, “Social Justice,” even inserts a rhyming interview. Just as embracing nature can teach us how to lead with kindness and care for others around us, so, per the author, can God. Some of the longest poems ruminate on Christ’s birth (“Birth Day”) and its impact on Mary (“Mary’s Pondering”), but they abstain from delivering exclusionary Christian messages that might alienate readers with more secular tastes—in one moment of humor, Joseph sleeps through the birth of Jesus. In the collection’s second half, God and nature often become entangled, and the poems’ speakers have no fear of returning to the Earth, which means reaching heaven; there are no true endings in the natural world. While these are not novel ideas enlivened by mind-bending imagery, they may serve readers seeking something short and sincere.
An optimistic poetic consideration of nature’s constancy.