Dark Thirty
96 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:13 Feb 2009
ISBN:9780816528141
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Dark Thirty

SERIES:
The University of Arizona Press
Writing sometimes in dialect, sometimes in gunshot bursts, sometimes in sinuous lines that snake across the page, Santee Frazier crafts poems that are edgy and restless. The poems in Dark Thirty, Frazier’s debut collection, address subjects that are not often thought of as “poetic,” like poverty, alcoholism, cruelty, and homelessness. Frazier’s poems emerge from the darkest corners of experience: “I search the cabinet and icebox—drink the pickle juice / from the jar. Bologna, / hard at the edges, / browning on the kitchen / table since yesterday. / I search the cabinet and icebox—the curdling / milk almost smells drinkable.”

Dark Thirty takes us on a loosely autobiographical trip through Cherokee country, the backwoods towns and the big cities, giving us clear-eyed portraits of Native people surviving contemporary America. In Frazier’s world, there is no romanticizing of Native American life. Here cops knock on the door of a low-rent apartment after a neighbor has been stabbed. Here a poem’s narrator recalls firing a .38 pistol—“barrel glowing like oil in a gutter-puddle”—for the first time. Here a young man catches a Greyhound bus to Flagstaff after his ex-girlfriend tells him he has fathered a child. Yet even in the midst of violence and despair there is time for the beauty of the world to shine through: “The Cutlass rattling out / the last fumes of gas, engine stops, / the night dimly lit by the moon / hung over the treetops; / owls calling each other from / hilltop to valley bend.”

Like viewing photographs that repel us even as they draw us in, we are pulled into these poems. We’re compelled to turn the page and read the next poem. And the next. And each poem rewards us with a world freshly seen and remade for us of sound and image and voice.
Santee G. Frazier is member of the Oklahoma Cherokee Nation. He is currently attending Syracuse University’s Creative Writing Program as a University Fellow. His poems have appeared in various literary publications such as Ontario Review and American Poet.
Root Juice

Dry Creek
Mama’s Work
Chauncey
Hunter’s Moon
Joe Bunch
Bluetop
Nick Cheater

Baptism of the Knife
Circus Fire
The Bottle Collector
Baptism of the Knife
Glue and Knives
Fragments

The Carnival
Pickax
Nauxcey Moss
Gunshot Conjure
One-Room Apartment
The Carnival

Skillet Face
Mangled and Beautiful Girls
Ripped on a Friday Night
County Jail
Ringmaster
Mangled, Letters, and the Target Girl
Mangled and the Adventures of Sgt. Rock
Mangled, the Knife, and the Funeral
Mangled in the Sunset
Odd Jobs
Mangled, Memory, and the Wheelchair

Jack Move
Firecracker
Coin Laundry
Ornament
Firing a .38 at Age Sixteen
Randolph on Fire
Cityscape
Crosstown
Staggering the Sidewalk
Listo
Cityscape
Sour Mash
Seasonal Cityscape
10th Street Anthem
Jack Move

Aerosol
Solitude
The Robbery
Stranded
Eating against a Wall
An Aerosoled Representation of the Maya and Moché

Acknowledgments
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