From Library Journal
"Ammonites,"
the long, satisfying poem that concludes Jordan's second collection, traces the relationship between memorabilia and art, between relics
of life and life itself. An ammonite is a type of coiled fossil, recalling, for this poet, Goethe's house, near which
she bought one from a woman who was selling them on the street, and also recalling a chapel in which Latin prayers are lettered
in human bone. And if the fossil's name also brings to mind the name of well-known poet A.R. Ammons, who like Jordan
resides in upstate New York and is drawn into natural forms as territory for the mind's wanderings, perhaps it is no
accident: "Elemental/mixtures of form: the narcissi, the snow,/ my fingers with their unprecedented whorls, variations/
in the matter." Although Jordan's
artistic strategy is to humanize the world by weaving a web of connections, she is not deceived into a grandiose vision:
"there are no symbols in the world, only things/ we tend." And while there are no fireworks in these quiet, mindful
poems, there is much that is human and deeply considered. Jordan's first book, Channel (Beacon, 1990), was a winner of the "Barnard New
Poets" series. Recommended for most poetry collections? Ellen Kaufman, Dewey Ballantine Law Lib., New York
Copyright
1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
A previous winner of the Barnard Prize, Jordan
offers a second volume (after Channel, 1990) that’s serious and somber and relies on an intellectually compelling dialectic
of the abstract and the natural. Jordan’s
unsettling metaphysics leads to abrupt line shifts and edgy phrases: Her poems begin with debris, the trace elements of the
title, and ends wondering what the difference is between trash and keepsake. The known, referential world is simply a hall
of exits (Dinosaur Calendar); and Roman ruins, the shells in Goethe’s house, animal remains all yield no meaning,
just an indifference of things. Many of the weary poems here record the world after the Fall, the loss of faith and certainty;
and imagine a prelapsarian idyll before knowledge and perspective differentiated objects with names (Anchorites). Poems
such as The Cult of Solitude and Spectrum announce Jordan's loneliness and escape from the world, her admiration for a contemplative life in which silence widens into
exile. Keeping vigil with discontent, Jordan
pierces the veil of debris (O) in poems that are always smart, and sometimes prophetic. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus
Associates, LP. All rights reserved.