Glimmers and Ghosts: Review of Laura Van Prooyens泭Frances of the Wider Field
by Kim Jacobs-Beck

Reviewed:泭Frances of the Wider Field泭(Lily Poetry Press, 2021).
In Laura Van Prooyens泭Frances of the Wider Field, time and space are slippery things, as is memory. Memory and the mysterious Frances of the title hover over the book like glimmers and ghosts seen from the corner of the eye. The book shifts back and forth between the narrators childhood and her present as family members age and confront illness. Good memories and unsettling ones are recalled in concrete, memorable details, and often, the narrator wonders what they mean, simply documenting rather than attaching significance to them.
In the poem Location: Frances Van Prooyen gathers many of the books motifs: childhood, adulthood, death, voices and utterances. Trees and coins become preternatural, almost talismanic:
泭 泭 泭 泭 泭 You might say,泭I dont understand,
泭 泭 泭 泭 泭 And Id say,泭This is not my voice. Its something
泭 泭 泭 泭 泭 in the leaves that keeps speaking. Something that saw me
泭 泭 泭 泭 泭 as a child, rubbed a coin on the sole of my foot.
泭 泭 泭 泭 泭 When I say Frances, I mean a woman. I mean
泭 泭 泭 泭 泭 a place. The dead cling to the land.
The wind speaks, but what it says is not clear. We dont know why a coin was rubbed on a childs foot. The narrator is willing to sit with ambiguity rather than searching to make sense of what Frances is, or is not.
The fading memory of the narrators mother is contrasted throughout with memories of growing up in a close-knit, extended family. In Elegy for My Mothers Mind, Van Prooyen, a Chicago native, employs an image familiar to any Midwesterner as a heartbreaking metaphor: Were walking inside your mind where its beginning to snow,/and no matter how quickly I shovel, the path will go blank. Her deft ability to bring simple images like these into emotional and situational connection is one of the strengths of the book.
Place figures strongly here too. Numerous poems are located in Van Prooyens hometown in the south suburbs of Chicago, which serves as the liminal edge between the urban and the rural. On one side, there are the historical onion fields, planted by European immigrant farmers long ago; on the other, the rust of泭 20th-century industry, as the The Calumet Region shows: Where beauty/has something to do with highway noise, with grass breaking//through the cracks, with the kicked-in door on the foreclosed home. Interspersed with scenes set at the bottom of Chicagoland are poems of Texaswarmer, floral, more comfortable, yet both seem like home; this is where she chooses to make her own life: Miss you is a street full of pecans that roll/under my feet (Postcard from Texas).
Van Prooyen evokes all of these complexities with a reflective, almost meditative voice driven by care with the sentences pacing and attentive use of sensory language, in particular of the childhood tastes and smells that evoke memories: faint onion on the air, bacon frying, Sunday pot roast and gravy, metallic tang of coins on the tongue.
Frances of the Wider Field泭is tender, nostalgic, and slightly surreal. Laura Van Prooyen captures the illusory quality of memories rooted in emotion. The ones that stay with us often recall powerful moments of shame, grief, or joy, yet the tone throughout is calm and reflective, showing the distance in time and place from the moments recalled. These poems are a finely-polished series of delicate meditations on the everyday.
泭is professor of English at the University of Cincinnati Clermont College. She is the author of a chapbook,泭Torch泭(Wolfson Press). Her reviews can be found in泭Constant Critic/Fence, The Rumpus, Los Angeles Review, Gigantic Sequins, Crab Creek Review, Barrelhouse, Drunk Monkeys,泭and泭drizzle review,泭among others. Her poems can be found in泭West Trestle Review,泭Nixes Mate,泭Gyroscope,泭Apple Valley Review, SWWIM Every Day,泭and泭roam literature,泭among others. She is the founder and editor-in-chief of Milk & Cake Press.