No longer
I:
from Voittokulku

Markku Paasonen
Photo
C-G Hagström
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Jouni Inkala on Markku Paasonens prose poems
The new collection of prose poems by Markku Paasonen (born 1967),
Voittokulku (Triumphal march, Tammi), is a charming
collection of imagistic textures born out of intellectual and emotional
impetuosity. His prize-winning earlier collections of poetry, Aurinkopunos
and Verkko (Sunbraid, 1997, and The net,
1999, WSOY), were well-received. Jyrki Kiiskinen, in writing about
the first collection in Books from Finland 2/1998, said it
reminded him of the work of the late Octavio Pazs exuberant
tropical poetry: But our man does live in Helsinki, where it
may snow in May.
Multi-dimensional, breathing incidents
grow from the entrails of the book, throwing their nets over story-like
motifs they themselves cannot always know whether their prey
will be the urban landscape and its excretions, darkly radiant in
the human body, or perhaps the dross of life, revealed in the ruins
of a demolished block of flats. The narrative pulse of language blows
through both emptiness and satiety, wandering through a previously
unknown wonderland and the mathematically mysterious creatures that
populate it, living on the brink of the precipices of their own existence.
In the fairy-tale like urban quagmire
of moments and stories, the charm of direction-finding lies in the
fact that the plot- and dreamlike images each have at birth a tone
that is always a step, scalp, bloody footprint or shout wilder, more
revealing and, interestingly, more consoling. The stories genetic
and hybrid variations force the reader to drill into their inner space,
to submerge himself in their languidly extending, intoxicating depths,
where surprisingly voiced and formed elements hum: Im
muttering this at night when the city lies tired beside me, the slow
city whose sewers suck liquid from the dead until the dead petrify
into the stone on which the city sleeps. I lie tired on the soft spot
beneath the citys bones where the hours of light melt together
and darkness is born....
The stone-dust of the urban landscape,
the slashing pain of flesh and the roar of the subcutaneous cells
produce a peculiar garbage catacomb of beauty. From its junctions,
ring roads and roundabouts a fascinating route leads to the place
where different voices meet in coincidences garnished with original
humour, which nevertheless always seem inevitable.
The chorus of the stories furiously
reveals its different tones and tempos, and its skilful conductor,
shaping the whole into an assured synthetic wholeness, has been given
an entire army of previously undiscovered species, genuses and classes
like knowledge growing from the depths of expectation, in which
one can submerge oneself, in which one swims in the sea in all
directions, in which the mountain of the sea bottom moves, and when
the quaking begins, begins slowly, the beginning lasts for years and
intensifies when one thinks that no more....
The vigorous, gold-scented narrative
of Markku Paasonens prose poems transforms the weather conditions
of various microclimates and the elements that sleep in the cores
of experience into a set of prisms that refracts in words. It illuminates
personally furnished, self-dissolving and self-rebuilding homes, for
they are something completely new to life, matter that writhes in
a constant state of parturition.
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