Source: Poet Jennifer C. Wolfe
Paperback, 108 pages
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Reflections of Hostile Revelries: A Collection of Political Poetry Musings by Jennifer C. Wolfe is another collection of political poetry ripped from the headlines, as the narrator comments on the mistakes made by our political leaders and political campaigns gone wrong. These poems read more like critical essays, rather than verse, using a narrative prose style that grabs a headline and picks it apart with a fine-toothed comb to unveil the unsupported facts of today’s political platforms and the flip-flopping of candidates eager to please the masses. She covers topics ranging from immigration enforcement to the “nanny” state laws, and some of these poems are hilarious in their re-appropriation of pop culture.
Not Quite the Flintstones (page 87) In honor of everything having to do with our fumbling friends at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), I would like to present A memorable TV cartoon sing-song within a new light: FEMA! Meet the FEMA! They're a large disaster family; From the town of D.C., They're a sad page out of history, Someday, maybe they will get things right, Then they'll be able to fix a plight. When you're with the FEMA, It's a Yabba-dabba-do time, Hard to find food time; We'll have a dismal time! [insert cherry, twelve second big band musical interlude] Repeat: We'll have a dismal time! (Screaming): FEMA!
Wolfe has an uncanny sense of humor, while still calling attention to the problems in today’s government. Like the horrifying news we hear and see on the radio, Internet, and television, these poems call attention to the problems in government — ones as voters we should be paying attention to and looking for ways to resolve them when voting for candidates — and brings to life the humor of the situation, and sometimes in a particularly ridiculous way. Wolfe does not stop at just politicians, poking fun and holes in big business like the banking sector’s use of fees to charge money to its own customers for using their own debit cards provided to them by the banks that issue them. She even crosses the U.S. borders into international politics.
Benghazi, Libya Aftermath -- A Haiku for You (page 69) Barack Obama, On four dead Americans: "A bump in the road."
Reflections of Hostile Revelries: A Collection of Political Poetry Musings by Jennifer C. Wolfe uses longer narrative poems to critique the world around us, but she also uses haiku to comment on events. And a haiku may be the best way to comment on some of the most tragic events that have occurred in recent years, particularly those that have left us speechless.
About the Poet:
Jennifer C. Wolfe grew up in Maplewood, Minn., and studied fiction writing and poetry at Century College in White Bear Lake. Mississippi. Wolfe has five previous publishing credentials: a poem “If” included within the Century College (White Bear Lake, MN) Spring 2008 Student Lounge literary magazine along with three poetry manuscripts, Kick the Stones: Everyday Hegemony, Empire, and Disillusionment published as an eBook by BlazeVOX Books, New York, October 2008, Yukon Rumination: Great Fun for All in the Land of Sarah Palin’s Joe Sixpack Alaska, published as an eBook by BlazeVOX Books, New York, June 2009, and Healing Optimism, and Polarization, published as an eBook by BlazeVOX Books, New York, February 2010, and two poems “St. Patrick’s Day” and “Roller Coaster,” published within the online edition of Scrambler Magazine, Issue 39, June 2010.
Other Reviews:
Book 24 for the Dive Into Poetry Reading Challenge 2014.