Prairie Fire Review of Books Review of All Souls’

By Sue Sorensen, Vol 13, No. 1 (2013)

Several poems in this skillful collection were so good on first reading that I put the book away for awhile and later returned to see if the same shivers would occur. They did. Particularly in “Housework,” a poignant poem about her aging Winnipeg parents, and “The New House,” a gift poem for her son, Rhea Tregebov demonstrates her mastery of intimate moments of sadness that contain a strange simultaneous joy. The book’s epigraph from Raymond Carver asks “And did you get what / you wanted from this life, even so?” and the first poem, “D’un certain âge,” signals Tregebov’s current emphasis on the disappointments and surprises of maturation and aging. This focus is personal, but also global; many poems feature her hopeful, angry fears about our beleaguered planet.

Tregebov is an affable poet, lyrical and smart, with occasional bursts of vernacular jokiness that leaven things nicely. More often than not it is a dexterous phrase that will catch one’s attention, rather than a whole poem. The call to write a poem in “D’un certain âge” awakens by “putting its little hands on your face” (13), and in “Le Temps des Cerises” the poet wistfully wants “this curious project to continue” (24) even though this project is the failed human stewardship of Earth. But the entire poem of “Leaving Toronto” is a stunner – the city evoked in terms of malfunction and filth, yet great affection – as is “Party,” a tour de force of shape-changing evocation and writerly ingenuity.

Still, Tregebov’s most potent contribution is perhaps the full and incisive attention she gives to those apparently small, distinct moments when words, suddenly, are vivacious and crucial. The soundscape of “The Gardens of the Antarctic” is alive with crunchy language: eking, pip, growlers, tatting, scabbed, and (my favourite) indigenous midges (25/26). Her effects are auditory and intellectual, but then move outward from brain and ear. The reader’s response is bodily and even spiritual.

http://ojs.lib.umanitoba.ca/index.php/prairie_fire/article/view/498