Lucinda Watson's THE FAVORITE

Lucinda Watson has been a teacher, a healer, a naturalist guide, a storyteller, and  a board member for a few nonprofits, sometimes all at once. She worked for more than ten years at the Haas School of Business (U C Berkeley) teaching communication skills and recruiting business leaders to speak. She also taught at San Francisco State. Now a full time poet and blogger, she devotes her time to volunteering with kids in local schools and to causes that focus on women and children. Her poetry has been published in dozens of journals, including The Round, The Louisville Review, Healing Muse, The Stickman Review, and Pennsylvania English. Check her blog at https://lucindaw.wordpress.com.

 

The Favorite is, in Cig Harvey’s words, “an arrow to the heart.” Its sixty-four poems are gently shaped into three parts as Watson leads readers into her childhood’s world of wealth and privilege, recognizes the psychological costs inhabitants pay, and demonstrates a wide and wonderful range of reactions.

 

Most of the fifteen poems in Part I are based on childhood memories. Four sisters ride uncomfortably in the back seat of the big car, ordered not to wrinkle their Sunday dresses, while their brother “rides shotgun and wears what he wants.” A little girl paddles around a lake in an old canoe, her sense of freedom tied to hiding herself, or pretending she’s Pocahantas. Gender norms strongly favor the family’s only boy, and its powerful, charismatic father, whose presence inspires awe and fear, compliance and rebellion. Straight women, passive women, pretty and well-dressed women—question, enjoy, and are damaged by their privilege. In “Another Hurricane Coming,” for example, we understand what’s lost when a mother no longer wants her children to “feel the wind.” The fifteen poems in Part II stretch the threads first spun in childhood into adolescence, by turns angry, loving, subtle and compassionate. “When I Think of My Mother, I See a Closed Door,” ends the section appropriately.

 

Part III is longer-- its voice generally older, more accepting, more free in its metaphors, and marked by a wonderfully wry sense of humor. As Richard Blanco says, “Watson tenderly, yet unabashedly, speaks to the allure and trappings of womanhood as she traces its arc from the innocent expectations of a girl, to the fear of a teenager forced to conform, to a fully actuated woman ... self-aware and fully alive with all her past and her future, her pain and healing, her losses and her newfound hopes.”