Description
Winner of the Fall 2011 Black River Chapbook Competition
A one-armed barber burns the family farmhouse to the ground. A pair of poachers carve their initials into the carcass of a deer. A father begs his son to spare him from the nursing home. A donkey brays the name of St. Catherine, but no one is around to notice. In Nick McRae’s Mountain Redemption, these portraits and many others blur legend and autobiography into a vision of the world that is dark, but not devoid of hope. From gritty North Georgia mountaintowns to the mythic landscapes of the Bible, McRae’s poems of place and history interrogate Christian mythos and the legacy of Southern ruralism as they weave together beauty with violence, family with faith, elegy with praise, and story with song.
KILLING A RATTLER
At first, the double-barreled shotgun blast,
and then the dull, wet thump and metal clank
the snake made as he dropped it chunk by chunk
into a pail. With eyes clamped shut, I’d missed
the kill. I felt a rough hand clasp my wrist
as his tobacco wafted close: Boy, think
before you walk out here alone. The stink
of blood and gunshot ripened as he passed
the pail beneath my face. I’d heard of snakes
the size of a man’s leg, been taught to steer
away from brush and dark thickets. I squealed
as Grandpa palmed my forearm like an axe.
He thrust my hand into the cooling mire
of meat and scales then held me as I bawled.