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Mandolin
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Outlaw
Style
Poems by R. T. Smith
Exploring the culture and landscape
of the American South
"An elegant music undergirds the poems in R. T. Smith’s
haunting new collection, Outlaw Style. These are
poems that seek and find the ‘blood harmony’ in
the mongrel that is history. They plumb the depths of those
kindred motivators in the pursuit of beauty—madness
and passion, mystery and genius—to grapple with the
legacies of history, both public and private. If it is true,
as Smith reminds us quoting Plato, that ‘A man’s
mask is apt to become his face,’ that danger, here,
is a risk worth Smith’s undertaking. In this brave book,
he is a poet enthralled to history and music, taking on the
competing narratives of our American past, those many versions
that, when acknowledged, get us closest to truth. I will
save myself if I can he writes in ‘Strange Fruit,
1939,’ a poem whose words are uttered as if to redeem
us all”
—Natasha Trethewey, author of Native
Guard, winner of the 2007 Pulitzer Prize
"Outlaw Style is the finest, most powerful book
of R. T. Smith’s mighty career. It bristles with candor
and violence and makes the kind of music that only comes from
a rare mix of craft and abandon. This book reminds me why
southern poetry matters—it is a shining chunk of the
American soul. If you want a masterpiece, here is one.”
—Steve Scafidi, author of Sparks
from a Nine-Pound Hammer
“Rod Smith’s new book makes even the grimmest,
quasi-Manichean spirits—like his fellow Georgian, Flannery
O’Connor—want to get happy and testify to the
workings of the Holy Spirit; and, simultaneously, to bargain
with the Devil for the ability to grab a guitar’s neck
and confess ‘the enduring thirst for melody.’
Smith delves deeply into the traditions of Southern music,
as well as the story of John Wilkes Booth and outsider artists.
He arrives at a place beyond wisdom, his high notes resounding
with humility, confidence, and sprezzatura. ‘O play
that thing!’ is probably a more fitting accolade than
‘bravo,’ and Outlaw Style makes us crave
an encore. Then another”
—Diann Blakely, author of Farewell,
My Lovelies
Outlaw
Style is a collection of narrative and lyric poems, many
of them in the tradition of Robert Browning’s dramatic
monologues. While gothic imagery, humor, and nineteenth-century
diction and reference alternate and interweave, the four thematic
currents that converge in the collection are music, race,
spirituality, and the impact of monstrosity on somewhat innocent
bystanders.
Poems like “Dar He,” “Scuppernongs,”
and “Plantation of the Mad” address the history
of American racial intolerance with muted horror, while the
final series of poems explores the roots and impact of traditional
music, from unsettling songs of the Carter Family through
Delta Blues and the haunting ballad “Strange Fruit.”
The collection also features poems, such as “Shepherd
Ollie Strawbridge on the Chicken Business,” which question
the nature of spirituality; and the central section, “The
Booth Prism,” performs a kind of séance in which
the author channels the voices of many of the people—from
Anna Surratt Tonry to Booth’s lovers and siblings—whose
lives were altered by contact with Lincoln’s assassin.
Throughout Outlaw Style formal and vernacular rhythms
stand in counterpoint, images of violence excavate a stark
and troubling beauty, and history and mystery fuse and feud,
as the landscape and culture of the American South are presented
for interrogation and understanding.
R. T. Smith is the editor of the journal
Shenandoah at Washington and Lee University. He is the author
of a number of books, most recently, Uke Rivers Delivers:
Stories; The Hollow Log Lounge: Poems; and Messenger,
winner of the Library of Virginia’s Literary Award for
Poetry. Among his other awards are the Cohen Prize for Poetry,
the Guy Owen Prize, and three Pushcart Prizes.
November
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, 110 pages
$16.00 paper
ISBN 978-1-55728-853-0 | 1-55728-853-4
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