Blue Horses by Mary Oliver

It’s hard to review a book of poetry. Mary Oliver is one of my favorite poets, and I discovered her work a few years ago by picking up one of her books in a bookstore and opening to random pages and reading her poems. (That’s how I have discovered most every poet that I like.) I was quickly enchanted and have since been amassing most of her published work.

Mary Oliver’s poems speak to the harmony we can find with nature and the wonder of being alive in a beautiful world. They are the kind of poems I imagine Anne Shirley would write. If you (like me) view Anne Shirley as a kindred spirit, you will likely find delight in Mary Oliver’s poems as well.

I loved this collection. The first 3 or 4 poems didn’t really capture me, and I was wondering if I’d enjoy this collection as much as the rest. But then suddenly I was hooked and loved every single one of the poems that followed. It ended up being my favorite of all her collections that I’ve read so far.

One of the poems is titled “I’m feeling fabulous, possibly too much so, but I love it” – how can you not smile at a title like that?

Because I believe you have to read/sample a poet’s work to know what you might like, here’s my favorite poem from this collection.

IF I WANTED A BOAT by Mary Oliver

I would want a boat, if I wanted a
boat, that bounded hard on the waves,
that didn’t know starboard from port
and wouldn’t learn, that welcomed
dolphins and headed straight for the
whales, that, when rocks were close,
would slide in for a touch or two,
that wouldn’t keep land in sight and
went fast, that leaped into the spray.
What kind of life is it always to plan
and do, to promise and finish, to wish
for the near and the safe? Yes, by the
heavens, if I wanted a boat I would want
a boat I couldn’t steer.

-from Blue Horses, published 2014 by Penguin Press  |  Buy this book: Amazon, IndieBound

By Emily

Book-hoarding INFJ who likes to leave the Shire and go on adventures.

3 comments

  1. Wonderful review, Emily! I discovered Mary Oliver sometime back and love her poems. I haven’t read any of her collections in full though but have read some of her poems in anthologies. I loved the poem that you have quoted. So beautiful! That sentence about starboard and port made me smile :) I used to work for a while in a job which involved knowing how a ship was structured and I always got confused between starboard and port – I had to always refer to a ship’s picture to find out. I don’t think I have got it even today.

    1. Thank you Vishy! I am the same way – I went on a 2 week arctic expedition while I was traveling, and had a very hard time remembering starboard and port – and then once off the ship I promptly forgot again!

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