The Fragmented Quest: A Review of L.I. Henley’s Starshine Road
review and collage by Laura Maher
So often, when people tell stories of the desert, they are stories of adventure, stories about an important quest.
As a child of a desert, I did not question my surroundings, nor did I find any extraordinary meaning in them. When my brother and I wanted adventure, we would take to the desert behind the house, build forts under the shade of a mesquite tree, hang trinkets from the palo verde tree, dig trenches to hide our buried treasures under a thicket of prickly pear cactus. These secret childhood places branched off the arroyo running through the backyard; it was our personal highway we shared with the javelina, bobcats, rattlesnakes, mule deer, all getting where we had to go. Harris hawks and turkey vultures watched from above, cast their shadows on our playground. The sun was warm on my head and my back.
And there is a thing about the desert sun. There is a particular kind of light I’ve only ever found in the desert that is unrelenting yet soft, as if you’re looking through gauze. (Some would call this a veil.)
Often, my brother and I returned home with sand in our shoes, mica flecks under our fingernails, leaves of creosote bush stuck in our curls. I wouldn’t say we were wiser, but we learned to hold the secret wonders of our play. The desert was ours, and this was a gift.
As a child of the desert who now finds herself as an adult here too, I find the desert-as-quest stories just as embodied in the spirit of children’s play as in the adult’s search.
(What I mean to say is that there is seeking in the desert and there is finding in the desert.)
Reading L.I. Henley’s Starshine Road is like the experience of walking the arroyo to my childhood home. I am using memory as well as instinct to traverse its pages. The trail is familiar and disorienting. These are poems deeply situated in a specific place and time, and yet Henley allows enough space for readers to see with our own eyes. We get to do the seeing beside the poet, as if traveling on the same trail.
This might be the very nature of the desert-as-quest story: we have to set out to see things differently.
Henley plays with readers’ sense of discovery, returning to the place, the people, and the objects we know, casting them all in new light or with new details.
Take, for example, when she writes, in “Junk Pile as Seen from My Kitchen Table:”
It is a problem of perspective
The only thing clear is the stack of bricks
that are not the color of bricks
but loaves of bread.
Perspective is called a problem, yet I read it is the central resonance of the book. Henley asks readers to look and reimagine it all. The images of her desert are fractured and collaged.
Another thing about these desert-quests: you can set out to see things differently, but sometimes it is more important to see the same old things in a different light.
The poem titled “Story” begins with the sweetest, familiar incantation:
Little child
when you were being made
your father became a wind tunnel
your mother scattered against the walls
the windows with her cookbooks & tapes
The family relationship is familiar (child, mother, father) as is the subject (a creation story), but the actions and behaviors of the people and objects are surprising. This is true throughout the book. In poems like “Story,” “The Worst,” and later, in her “Junk Pile” series or “Shoe Tree” (a poem in twelve parts), objects and people are cast in unexpected roles. They are:
stove pipe pilfered from / a gutted cabin
and
ice cream scoop (existing) without / moving parts to break
and
the coffee can becomes / a man with many faces.
Though these objects are identified, they behave as embodied characters.
There are those who you meet on your quest: the sage advice-givers, the bad-examples, the giants or monsters who stand in your way, the lover. There are, in Henley’s world, deer-people, night-walkers, ghost-tigers. There is father, mother, husband. There is:
the man who worked at the health food store / when I was just graduating high school
and
the neighbors spanking each other
and
whoever lived here ten years ago.
In the desert-quest, you meet strangers who are friends and friends who are strangers.
The desert is rarely a place that people think about to seek comfort or refuge. In fact, the desert is too often framed as a wasteland. But Henley shows readers the duality of the place. Heat is harmful as much as healing, a small town is protective of its inhabitants as often as it is destructive toward them. A body, both broken and restored:
whiskey
because my legs stopped working & my body
burned & twitched for a year
you carried me
bathed me
washed my hair
& whiskey
because I’m better now
In Starshine Road, Henley shows us junk piles, a father’s anger, a grandfather’s guns and lost memory, an unknown illness, a town’s economic despair—all these memories baring teeth. Yet, because of the duality of the desert, she also shows the care of a lover, luminescent star-fall, and other beauties:
blue shadows
and
the color of the desert lilies
and
water like thick honey from the comb.
These are poems of loss, of desire, unambiguous and large, poems about memory and fortitude. These are poems to take with you when walking. These are poems to read under starlight.
If I had found this book when I was a child, I wouldn’t have known what to make of its pages, of its intensely described, haunting world. I wouldn’t have known what to make of the emotional texture of the place, or the idea that memories can be re-examined and altered with time. But somehow, this book still feels like one that could have protected me, a book that the playful child grown into the adult seeker finds like a fragmented map.
That is to say: I feel emboldened having read it. I feel like I’ve accomplished a quest.
Laura Maher is the author of the chapbook, Sleep Water (dancing girl press, 2017). Her poetry has appeared in Crazyhorse, Moonsick Magazine, The Collagist, New Ohio Review, and Third Coast. Laura holds a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Arizona, a Master of Arts from the University of Texas at Austin, and a Master of Fine Arts from Warren Wilson College. She lives, works, and writes in Tucson, Arizona.