Grateful for this new review of my book. I have learned that my tactic for reading reviews of Berceuse is pretty much holding my breath and scanning quickly before settling in to admire someone who writes so attentively and insightfully.
Grateful for this new review of my book. I have learned that my tactic for reading reviews of Berceuse is pretty much holding my breath and scanning quickly before settling in to admire someone who writes so attentively and insightfully.
Maybe this is symptomatic of elderly millennial energy, but I can no longer write or focus in a coffee shop.
I just finished an early copy I received of this book and you absolutely need to read it. Itβs available for pre-order and I promise you will love it. I will be thinking about and returning to this collection a lot.
@burnsidesoleil.bsky.social on living with his characters and finding his narrator.
Funny to see some hometown folks quibble about my first book.
That last line, in particular. Congratulations on the publication!
This interview was really fun. Thanks both to Tiana and NER.
Authorβs notes? Often, the poems, I believe, would be improved, richer, if the lyric wrestled with the context appended in the book. Also, these poems are sometimes so slight, a few clever rhetorical maneuvers, but emotionally distant. Instead, incorporate the notes. Let us read the burden.
Susan Stewartβs THE FOREST
These are landscapesβare they landscapes? An extraordinary collection of interiors.
His final lines really fascinate me. Theyβre wry; other times, mysterious. Never opaque. But even as he βcompletesβ the poem, the irony pushes back against the very idea of completion. He must end the lyric. He mistrusts ending anything.
Truly, poem after poem, the best. Adventurous. Funny as hell. Raw yet such beautiful music. If heβs considered a regionalist, in a way to contain or diminish, then the criticβs attitude is provincial, not the poems.
Donald Hall said you judge a poet only by their best works. If thatβs true, then Rodney Jones is one of the finest American poets. I donβt think the man has written a dull line, each collection and each poem charged, funny, and expansive in its imagination and tenderness.
And I like readings of a poem that are unafraid to be inconclusive, ending with a gesture to keep thinking and feeling with a lyric.
I like that one old etymology of βunderstandβ: βto stand in the midst of.β
A poem asks for attention, not complete knowledge, from a reader.
Not a critique of him. But Iβm also fascinated by different endingsβfascinated by poems that open rather than close. You donβt sense the boundary. You have to reread the same poem after the final lines, which create a new poem. Each time, a new poem.
This observation is too niche, useless, but in Donkey Gospel, Hoaglandβs poems have the most interesting thinking in the second third. He prefers the neat, witty closing that he pulls off incredibly well. But the second thirdβcompelled by the wondering and speculations there.
Also, traditional forms and free verse are interdependent, a tension that gives each meaning, music, and legibility in our culture. I think some of the most interesting poems enact this tension, working in multiple registers and traditions.
From Hass, Iβve learned that you can cultivate an overdetermined deep image, surrealistic and surprising, but if the rhythm of the line is just iambic, then are you really pushing the language forward?
I see many poems scattering lines across the page, space between one phrase or clause, which isnβt good or bad, or preferable or gauche, but when the syntax and the image donβt evoke striking musicality, the poem lacks tension, seems airy. Not that the form needs conflict. But maybe tension.
Rather than vivid depictions of beauty and the internal life, River depicts obsolescence.
The poems are light, lean at times, unencumbered by overwrought syntax. The Branch Will Not Break is epiphanicβyou can feel the poems open. But in River, itβs almost like a single undifferentiated bleak poem that never transforms.
James Wrightβs Shall We Gather at the Riverβs desolate atmosphere and dispossessed archetypal characters can seem like sentimentalized squalor, but the lines arenβt pathetic, even as the subjects are full of pathos.