Book Review - Fair Territory
michael wells
In the fall, the days grow shorter and the season comes to an end. The
baseball season that is. Two truths that every fan knows. Some relate
seasonal affective disorder or SAD to the fewer hours of sunlight. Perhaps,
but every fan has to feel that emotional tug that comes with the close of
the season. That feeling that is best summarized in A. Bartlett Giamatti's
The Green Fields of the Mind. I think it is no coincidence that this period
overlaps the SAD time of year.
It is during that bleak period between the final out of the season and
opening day for the next one that fans like me look for any chance to feed
our poor ravenous baseball souls. I found such an opportunity in Fair
Territory, where poet and baseball enthusiast Jilly Dybka has fashioned her
collection of baseball sonnets into a splendid winter diversion.
Fair Territory is a chapbook of 22 delicious takes on the game of baseball
with some history, a dash of trivia, as well as a view of the poet's own
memories related to baseball.
I'm not one who must have my poetry delivered to me in strict form but I am
open to such writing if it holds my attention and speaks to me. Dybka
succeeded on both accounts.
My personal favorites from the book are Mudball (with it's analogy between dirty little baseball lore and roughing up the balls before every game with
ball prepping goo) and New Haircut, looking back through a child's eyes.
Plus Opening Day has a brilliant politically humorous twist that I also loved.
Fair Territory is chapbook that will pack a therapeutic punch each
off-season. I plan to keep it handy on those nights that I long for the
smells of grass and beer and hotdogs under the lights.
Fair Territory is published by Bear Shirt Press.
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