In Gig at the Amtrak: Poems & Discoveries, Joe
Manning plays words like a jazz musician plays the saxophone - edgy, earthy, blue-noted, a little behind the beat - like Hank
Mobley, who inspired the title poem. And especially in the poetry born of his journeys in North Adams, Massachusetts, he paints
with the faded colors of Edward Hopper’s urban landscape. Haunting, stark, often very funny, his verses are spiced with
scraps of overheard conversations in cafes, candid comments from locals, and the author’s sympathetic and penetrating
observations. But Manning offers us much more than his poems. Always the unconventional writer, he carefully and cleverly
weaves in curious and sometimes heartbreaking old newspaper articles and stories he discovered while doing historical research.
Quotes From Reviews
"Joe Manning weaves together his poetry with stories from old newspaper clippings to show us the human connections
between days gone by and life as it is lived now in the coffee shops and train stations and along the riverbanks of small
towns. His poems capture so perfectly the natural cadence and rhythms of everyday people that we feel as if we are eavesdropping.
We come away reminded that community is as essential to our well-being as the air we breathe." -Elizabeth Winthrop,
author of over fifty works of fiction for adults and children, including Dog Show, Island Justice, The Castle in the Attic
and Dumpy La Rue."
"Joe Manning's new book moves his poetry to the forefront as he establishes himself as the bard of North
Adams, with the desire to let it know that it is not alone across space and time." -John E. Mitchell, North Adams Transcript.
"Joe Manning’s latest offering knits prose and poetry with historical reflection and fresh perspective
to create an artful, thought-provoking mosaic of ordinary people and the extraordinary moments they live." -Susan
Bush, iBerkshires.com (full article by Susan Bush below)
Joe
Manning Finds "Gig at the Amtrak," by Susan Bush
Author Joe Manning’s latest offering "Gig At The Amtrak" knits prose and poetry with historical reflection
and fresh perspective to create an artful, thought-provoking mosaic of ordinary people and the extraordinary moments they
live. Manning's original poems are the focus of the 102-page volume. "I felt it was time to establish myself as a
poet," Manning said during a Friday morning interview. The poetry is Manning's but the voices whose words pepper
the page belong to countless numbers of folks Manning has encountered, including dozens of North Adams residents.
"A great songwriter once said 'I don't write songs, I find them,'"
Manning said, and explained that for years, he has written down interesting phrases and descriptions he's heard during
conversations. "I always thought 'these people are more eloquent than I ever could be,'" he said.
News articles copied from old newspapers mingle with the poetry and deliver context
to Manning's work. "Little Immigrant's Sad Lot," originally published in the Daily Iowa State Press in 1899,
relayed the story of Alice Knearsey, a six-year-old Irish immigrant whose father apparently killed her mother during a voyage
across the sea to America. Alice, according to the report, was destined to return to Ireland and face life without either
parent.
Manning's poem "Elderly Housing" touches
on fate and missed opportunity.
"I had my chance….when
I was nineteen/Earl wanted to go to California when we got married/but I wasn't sure/so we didn't/He wound up at Sprague's/but
he died before he could retire/And now I live in the school/I used to walk to every morning/They call it elderly housing."
The poem continues on to consider "what is" against
"what might have been."
A quest for his own
genealogical roots led Manning to discover published snippets of ordinary life dating back to the mid-1800s, he said. While
cities and towns and economies and cultures evolve through time, the essence of humanity remains constant, he said.
"While searching [the Internet] for the name Manning, I would come up with
these old news articles from small communities in the 1800s," he said. "I would read these stories and they were
a wonderful window on history. These weren't major news stories with famous quotes, but they were these little vignettes
of life. And I would say 'these are a lot like my poetry, slices of life.'"
Numerous articles were included in the book because "I think I was making a statement that these so-called little
lives were very important," Manning said.
"When you
are growing up, you think that history was fashioned by famous people and big events," he said. "But everyone has
made history, everyone has contributed to history. All the great events in history have happened to people."
Manning's own ancestry illustrates his point: his great-grandfather Joseph
H. Manning was one of nine children born to an Irish immigrant couple and the sole surviving son of the Civil War. The awe
lies within the "what ifs," what if Manning's great-grandfather hadn't survived? What if the five brothers
had not been killed?
Life's precarious nature is acknowledged
through the book's title poem. Manning said that as a "tremendous fan of jazz," he is enamored with Hank Mobley.
Despite international acclaim, Mobley died homeless in a railroad station in 1986. One of Manning's daughters is a jazz
musician, and Manning's thoughts have turned to her.
"I
started thinking about my daughter and thinking 'will this be her fate?'" Manning said.
The title poem "Gig At The Amtrak" offers Manning's creative thoughts about Mobley's homeless life,
he said.
"I wrote this kind of fantasy about him trying
to eke out a living at the train station," Manning said. "My daughter showed it to her college professor and he
loved it. That's what gave me the confidence to write poetry.
Many
of the poems are about North Adams, as evidenced by titles including "Eagle Street," "Furnace Street,"
and "The Hills Have Their Way." Manning's love of and fascination for the city have generated two previous books:
"Steeples" and "Disappearing Into North Adams."
While Manning resides in Northampton, he is a frequent city visitor, and when asked, acknowledged that the city,
its history and struggle to shed a "dying mill town" image and cloak itself in an artistic mantle may well serve
as his "muse."
He has evolved as a person and a writer
since his first city junket about nine years ago, he said.
"I
look at things differently now than when I first came," he said. "This is not just a place to write about, this
is where I see my friends. This is where I found myself, my spiritual home. And I like what it [the city] is becoming."
"I think I’ve done something different with this
book," Manning said. "I think I was using the tools I was best at. An artist notices things that other people don't
notice and can make people see it, for the first time or differently for the first time. It's a great gift, and you’d
be a fool not to use it."