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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Drivers at the Short Time Motel


Gloria, E. (2000). Drivers at the short-time motel. New York: Penguin.

Paperback | $15.95 USD | ISBN-13: 9780140589252 | 96 pages | YA Poetry



Drivers at the Short-Time Motel


This book is part of the National Poetry Series and was a 1999 NPS Winner. It won Penguin’s Asian American Literature Award and includes 30 poems (“Penguin.com,” n.d.). Gloria’s poems deal with the lives of modern day Filipinos and their surroundings while others are set in America discussing the Asian American experience upon immigration. A theme of “moving forward” appears evident, but it is clear the narrator does not feel a true sense of belonging. The author uses poetry to explain how he is caught between two worlds – the one back home as a Filipino and the one in America. Finding a sense of belonging in the world is another theme – we can see this in “The Maid” (p. 19). A young girl enters a restaurant and while all the patrons seem to have given into the mainstream ways accepting American TV culture with their “gaudy cellular phones” this girl has held onto her past and is looking into the narrator saying “I know you, I know you” implying that the narrator must hold onto to his roots, despite their surroundings. Upon arrival in America, Gloria writes about more of these changes. “On Mission Road” is about an American taxicab driver who simply drops off the family, waits for payment and leaves. There was no thankfulness for the job or a debt of gratitude – there was only “service rendered” (p. 32).

Light used in the poems was sometimes blinding or flashing, serving as a symbolic warning, such as in “Subic Bay” (Gloria, 2000, p. 11). Darkness is another theme. The narrator doesn’t appreciate his “deadbeat” brother who wanted to escape the draft and flee to Canada. In Gloria’s poem “Ruin” he talks about his brother serving in Vietnam in darkness (p. 12). In “Nocturne: Two Visions” we read more about his brother’s involvement in the war. There are many dark historical references, including the mention of “Hiroshima ash” in “White Blouses” (p. 6), “debtors’ prison” in “Winter Fires” (p. 7) and Mount “Pinatubo Ash” in “Song of the Pillar Woman (p. 18). Gloria mentions the “season of the monsoon” and the “Japanese Occupation” in “Milkfish” (p. 35). Many poems are about his family and their lifestyles – the theme is family mixed with survival. The transition to America was not easy for the family. His father fixes cars for a living as described in the poem “Iron Man” (p. 33).

Tragedy is another theme. “Mauricio’s Song” is about a man who is leaving work and heading to meet his love but a bullet meets his heart instead (p. 4). Another sad poem “Saint Joe” recalls a time when the narrator tried to rescue a little girl from drowning, but she could not hold onto the rope – the girl drowned in the river.  The narrator had this flashback after seeing a pedicab driver hit by an oncoming Coca-Cola truck. “Joe” as he was called, tried to help, but the world continued to move forward while an ambulance approached in the distance (p. 10).

Eugene Gloria was born in Manila and has written three books of poems (“Eugene Gloria”, n.d.). He is qualified to write a book of poems about Asian Americans, but many of them I had a difficult time connecting with after one read. I had to do a little research on some of the terms from the poems including jeepneys. Readers will learn a lot from the dual experiences of Gloria. Recommended for young adult readers and up in public libraries with diverse populations and those readers who want to experience two very different worlds within one book. Gloria’s words should teach us to work harder on accepting and learning about other cultures: "If there were two worlds we are made to inhabit/ I would prefer the one I was forced to leave” (p. 18).  

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