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Flying Pope by Ban'ya Natsuishi, Cyberwit.net, India, 2008, pp. 139 $ 15 Paperback, ISBN: 978-81-8253-106-2
A MODERN MASTER OF HAIKU PAINTS THE COLLECTIVE CONSCIENCE.
A
gong sounds somewhere in the distance, and in the silence
that ensues the reverberations of the collective
conscience precipitate a collage of impressions that are
at once familiar, and yet far beyond the accepted
structures of perception. In this impressive collection of
contemporary haiku, Ban'ya Natsuishi expertly challenges
and coaxes the reader to join him in a flight of fancy -
in and out of reality and illusion - not so unlike the
great surrealist Salvador Dali. Both the reader and the
flying pope take to the air, suspended above the Earth
like an out-of-body experience ... observing from afar,
and yet experiencing the dream-like state as if it were
totally real - as a sort of déjà vu recollection of
the fringes between zazen and newspaper headlines ... or
perhaps the CNN rolling news texts, floating across the
bottom of the television screen. While it may be tempting
to point out Natsuishi as l'Enfant
terrible of contemporary haiku writing, his impudence
is not intended to shock. It is, in fact, this sense of
detachment in the author that binds together the
childlike, the serious, the sarcastic, the humorous and
the reflective - resulting in a splattering of
surrealistic images that pose far more questions to the
reader than give blatant commentary. Because of the
masterly free flying construction, the reader is just as
easily won over to the haiku of Ban'ya Natsuishi as
he/she might be to adventuresome comic books and animated
films.
True enough, there is much observation embedded in these
pearls of writing: sparkling semi-precious jewels singing,
dancing, and jabbering now and then about such themes as
politics, haiku writing without seasonal references, the
loneliness of papal responsibility, and the burden of
conscience. However, the real artistry of this work is
perhaps the succession of painterly haiku frescoes, all
variations on the same theme: the illusion of
consciousness.
Do
read this book several times - forward and backwards,
and even starting in the middle and proceeding in any
direction ... sometimes dancing back and forth. There are
many hidden levels within the poems, the silent
connections in between the poems and in the work as a
whole.
--
Adam Donaldson Powell, 2008 (based upon the English
version of "Flying Pope").
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