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Contemporary Poetry as a X-Mas Gift

 
 
Tamayyurt
13:49 / 18.12.04
A friend of mine asked me to get him a book of contemporary poems, but I don’t know much about the subject to get anything good. And I was wondering if you lot had any recommendations? A book by a single poet or an anthology by many are both fine. But I need this relatively soon.
 
 
unheimlich manoeuvre
14:26 / 19.12.04
how about "staying alive" published by bloodaxe, it's a decent compendium and it knocked "rattle bag" off the top spot.

or try something by carol ann duffy or benjamin zephaniah
 
 
iconoplast
15:02 / 19.12.04
Combinations of the Universe by Albert Goldbarth.

Seriously - you will not be dissapointed. It is so good. He writes the way Joseph Cornell assembled objects: by meticulously arranging fragments of things that you'd swear had nothing to do with each other, and showing that the fragments are really all talking about the same thing.
 
 
iconoplast
15:03 / 19.12.04
Oh - if the giftee already knows about Goldbarth there's this young guy in Brooklyn who's gaining some clout in the poetry circles - an ex is writing a thesis on him as the return of formalism or something - and who is very readable.

Timothy Donnelly, Twenty Seven Props for a Production of Eine Lebenzeit
 
 
Tamayyurt
04:59 / 21.12.04
You've sold me on Albert Goldbarth. Thanks.
 
 
Ender
21:17 / 21.12.04
I have said here in this forum before, and I will say it agian,

CHARLES BUKOWSKI IS THE GREATEST!

Look into his latest SIFTING THROUGH THE MADNESS FOR THE WORD THE LINE THE WAY they are published by black sparrow press.

GOOD LUCK AND HAPPY HOLIDAYS
 
 
iconoplast
03:49 / 22.12.04
"*blinks slowly* ...you think?"
 
 
ONLY NICE THINGS
12:04 / 22.12.04
Bill Hicks, it goes without saying, is also the greatest solo performer to set foot on stage. Metallica the greatest band. Grant Morrison the finest writer in prose.
 
 
Whisky Priestess
22:14 / 22.12.04
You just cannot go wrong with some Simon Armitage

The Hard

Here on the Hard, you're welcome to pull up and stay;
there's a flat fee of a quid for parking all day.

And wandering over the dunes, who wouldn't die
for the view: an endless estate of beach, the sea

kept out of the bay by the dam-wall of the sky.
Notice the sign, with details of last year's high tides.

Walk on, drawn to the shipwreck, a mirage of masts
a mile or so out, seemingly true and intact

but scuttled to serve as a target, and fixed on
by eyeballs staring from bird-hides lining the coast.

The vast, weather-washed, cornerless state of our mind
begins on the Hard; the Crown lays claim to the shore

between low tide and dry land, the country of sand,
but the moon is law. Take what you came here to find.

Stranger, the ticket you bought for a pound stays locked
in the car, like a butterfly trapped under glass;

stamped with the time, it tells us how taken you are,
how carried away by now, how deep and how far.

Simon Armitage
 
 
iconoplast
16:15 / 13.01.05
The Song of Too Much

A polo zealot, Akbar, "the greatest
and wisest Mogul emperor of India,"
insisted that all candidates for public office
pass a strenuous polo test by playing
against the emperor himself, at night - a darkly
moonless night - in chase of a wooden ball
especially set on fire. Those who qualif - oh,

excuse me: email. Lowell again. His
marriage. As if I headed Office Central Command
for routing the cloverleaf intricacy
of Lowell's and Angie's emotional traffic. He
hit her. He didn't. She sucked off Freddie's brother.
She didn't. Also the night where every dish in their kitchen
got broken. Lowell's and Angie's emotional shit

is how it finally feels to me, and joins the list
of fecal exotica: otter dung is spraints;
cow dung is bodewash; deer turds, fewmets.
If we added every offal, every spoor, and then included gleet
(hawk stomach phlegm), we'd beat - at least
in quantity - the fabled ten (or fifty or a hundred:
it varies) Eskimaux words for "snow"; for "shit"

it's anaq. This is all too much. The formal
prodigality of heaven is too much: or of the heavens,
to be accurate; there are seven
in Jewish mystic tradition, layered as if angelic realms
were strata demarcating a canyon wall (a not atypical
cosmology in world religious beliefs), and in the second
of these heavens "stand one hundred thousand myriad of chariots

of fire" (the wheels of which have eyes, and these
"are like the flames of burning coals").
Nor is the human spirit simpler. For Confucians,
there are two souls, shen and kuei - that is, two kinds
of soul: in reality, the body holds at least five shen
(and maybe up to a hundred) and the kuei consists
of seven sections. Nor is the body

simple: not the weaving fan of fringe around the mouth
of the fallopian tube, and not the twenty-foot-long duct
that's coiled in the cojones, and not a single one
of the hundred thousand beats of the heart in a day,
and not the scribbley walnut gnarls of the brain - there's nothing
uncomplicated about, or under, flesh. The bruise
displayed on Angie's left cheek has its origin explained now

by at least as many theories as the universe's. Maybe
it was Lowell fueled by cheap drink and a costly rage.
But then again, a woman in a neighboring town presented herself
repeatedly to the police and doctors, over a span of two years,
with the knife cuts that a "stalker" inflicted who
turned out to be - at last, as she admitted - herself.
We can't be sure. It's all too much. 3,200

feet of helium are required to lift a person;
there are mornings when I wake and there's not
helium enough for the weight of my eyelids.
"I don't know," said Lowell, sitting on a bench with me,
as if this aptly summarized his marriage-angst:
"I don't know." What he means is that the element
most commonly discovered in an opened human life

is overloadium. And we bear the facts
that are soiled by tears, as we carry the facts
that are spangled in celebration; we accept the wobbly,
in-and-outty "facts" of quantum physics, as we hold on
to the great Truths carved of marble, and the counter-Truths
of counter-marble . . . no wonder we falter,
and deal in hurt. And yet I think existence

wants an ever-thickened density of knowledge
and connection, so that one day Information
will itself have reached the threshold to become a mind
- a mind of which we're neurons, know it and like it
or not. "I just don't get it," Angie said
when a third beer loosened her studied reserve,
"why can't it 'work out'?" What she means is

there are moments when we envy "the blesséd virgin
Amelberga, whose body was said to have been guided
upriver to Ghent by a school of sturgeon" - she
was floated, trusting, cared for, through a sure,
directed course. I have my version
of this fancy. It's a poem of, oh, say sonnet-length;
it's supple, undisrupted. It feels like this:

I close the door. (Behind it: gabble
and disjunction.) And I walk into the clear,
black night. I'm in a great arena. Nothing
can be seen - there may be nothing
to be seen - except
of course for the ball on fire. That's all I need.
That's all: the darkness, and one burning sphere.
And I follow its light down the field.


-Albert Goldbarth
 
  
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