
Believe What You Can
Poems
This collection of poetry by West Virginia Poet Laureate Marc Harshman explores the difficulty of living with an awareness of the eventual death of all living things. Each of its four sections suggests a coping mechanism for this inevitable predicament, from storytelling, to accepting darkness and death as a creative force, to enjoying disruption and chaos, and finally to embracing the mystery of life as the most triumphant story of all.
These difficulties come “not quite haphazardly” and not without a “last light”—something “beyond” and as “sweet as apples.” With these moments of grace, Harshman taps into the satisfying richness that comes from unexpected revelations, helping us rise above the fragile recesses of life and death, all while portraying the lost rural worlds of the Midwest and Appalachia in ways untouched by sentiment or nostalgia.
These difficulties come “not quite haphazardly” and not without a “last light”—something “beyond” and as “sweet as apples.” With these moments of grace, Harshman taps into the satisfying richness that comes from unexpected revelations, helping us rise above the fragile recesses of life and death, all while portraying the lost rural worlds of the Midwest and Appalachia in ways untouched by sentiment or nostalgia.
CONTENTS
Yew Piney Mountain
Coal Country
Learning to Read
Return Ticket
Holding On
Worries
Dreaming the Farm
Grandmother at the Dressmakers’
Somewhere
Postcard
Seven League Boots
Aunt Helen
Evidence
Finding the Lost
How We Go Missing
Carrion Chance
Where No One Else Can Go
Pietà
A Moon Somewhere Else
Pink Ladies
Where They Can’t Find Us
Not Quite Haphazardly
These
Fucked
The Innocent
Time Traveler in Greenville, Ohio
Broken
Not with a Bang
Anti-Monotony
Normal
Vehicular
It Was Told
Cold Morning
Stone
Winter into Spring
Late September
Recoveries
Peter’s Mountain
Monastery
Jackson Pollock and the Starlings,Moundsville, West Virginia
The News
Clark Hill
You Could Live
And Fly
Beyond
With No Questions
Reading Notes
About the Author
“To enter this work is to remain open to the haphazard, the lopsided, the fragile, and the bracing details that tell our times as we both know and fear them. Believe What You Can is an astonishing and generous book that gives a credible ‘map of true witness.’”
Maggie Anderson, author of Windfall: New and Selected Poems and Dear All
Maggie Anderson, author of Windfall: New and Selected Poems and Dear All
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“Harshman’s poetic sophistication is clear and shows the insight and wisdom of an experienced poet who treats the forces of death, disruption, and dissonance with the seriousness and humor they deserve.”
Eddy Pendarvis, author of Like the Mountains of China and Ghost Dance Poems
Eddy Pendarvis, author of Like the Mountains of China and Ghost Dance Poems
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“Believe What You Can overflows with rich lines and vivid images, as the poet laureate of West Virginia speaks to classic concerns of loving the land, struggling to thrive, and holding on to what can be believed.”
Ron Houchin, author of The Man Who Saws Us In Half: Poems
Ron Houchin, author of The Man Who Saws Us In Half: Poems
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