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Hardcover The Selected Poems of David Shapiro Book

ISBN: 1585678775

ISBN13: 9781585678778

The Selected Poems of David Shapiro

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

David Shapiro's poetry -- from his acclaimed 1965 debut January to the recent poems included in this career-spanning collection -- speaks with far-ranging erudition while playing across the surface of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Poetry

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

His Lines Will Continue to Haunt You . . .

I read an internet interview of David Shapiro once. After a reading, a woman accosted him: "Your poetry isn't worth Milton's big toe!" (or something along those lines). But I couldn't disagree more. I think within her comment lies a frustration with Shapiro's refusal to conform to any one idea, theme, or sequence of events - but many, and so many that initially his poetry can seem jumbled or confused. It took me a while to realize that Shapiro's world is that of the non-linear, and often symbolic thought patterns we form - from the "subconscious" mind. Once this was understood, I didn't approach each poem with the impulse to at first situate myself in a particular environment or scene. Rather, I simply relaxed that "need" and let myself slip into a kind of reverie, and THAT is where the voice and power of this truly great poet takes the stage. I must admit that I prefer it when his stanzas are bare, and each well-constructed phrase becomes a slow and startling overlay. But throughout this entire book, Shapiro's amazing and subtle wit, his lucid and dream-like connections will haunt you - if you let them - for years to come. Shapiro also has an amazing ear. Moreover, he so often gives us the voluptuous and sublime - side by side! I'll end this review with one of his own lines: "Be mute for me contemplative violin."

A Superb Collection

I think "New and Selected Poems" is a wonderful collection that does justice to Shapiro's work. The book presents him in his fullness as a poet. Reading it was like spending a lifetime with his mind; I went with him through years. This is not just because I know the old poems so well and they are so old, but also because the selections preserve the sense and power of the individual books, so that it is like reading the books themselves. It is an amazing feat. It was, in any case, deeply rewarding and enjoyable to see the old favorites, starting with "Canticle" #1, and to become absorbed in some of the long poems I had or hadn't seen before. Long formal pieces like "The Devil's Trill Sonata" have room to breathe in this book, whose length I enjoyed. I am flat-out in awe of the sestina on p. 151. "To an Idea" is a book I hadn't seen, and it was wonderful to discover the "Index of First Lines," to take only one example. The selection from "Poems from Deal" is a good example of how well Shapiro has constructed and arranged these selections; where "Master Canterel at Locus Solus, "Elegy to Sports," and "Ode" appeared in that order in the book, now they work as a terrific sequence, and "Ode" still provides the strong ending it gave the book. I was very moved by the poems on his mother's death. The poems that might seem difficult to read work perfectly with each other, casting a clarity over his work like some kind of brilliant shadow. I always saw the Rimbaud in him, but now I see much better the Mallarmé. He has put down the poems in spite of the page's defending its whiteness, and their clarity is rigorous and moving. One interesting thing about the series of poems is the way they pick up lines and themes from each other ("Here, their passports are taken away from them" recurring on p. 85, the eraser fluid, Goofy). So the selection works as a linear series but also as a complex in which the poems reflect each other, and beyond that it works as a reimagining and condensation of the original form of each book. There is so much power in these poems, individually and seen together, that I lack the words to convey my solid admiration for his career and for his achievement in the new book. I always knew he was a great poet, but now I see it much more clearly.
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