The Infinitesimals
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- $19.99
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
"Kasischke's poems are powered by a skillful use of imagery and the subtle, ingenious way she turns a phrase."—Austin American-Statesman
The Infinitesimals stares directly at illness and death, employing the same highly evocative and symbolic style that earned Laura Kasischke the 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award for poetry. Drawing upon her own experiences with cancer, and the lives and deaths of loved ones, Kasischke's new work commands a lyrical and dark intensity.
Laura Kasischke is the author of eight collections of poetry and seven novels. She teaches at the University of Michigan and lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Kasischke (Space, in Chains) astonishes with her lyricism and metaphorical power as she considers illness and mortality through exacting, imaginative poems. The collection's formal variety amplifies the mysterious, dreamy settings of these poems, which are grounded in their precise interrogations and astute observations. Poems that begin in hospital rooms are transported to a more fable-like atmosphere: "But, having come to visit my father, I/ knelt down in the desert and parted the sands/ to search for the path on my knees and hands./ I drank from the mirage// of the pond for an answer." The brevity of Kasischke's lines movingly captures the absence of death and the limitations on memory, and her mastery of meticulous, though seemingly effortless, description shines throughout, as when she dubs a cake once baked for her father as "Soggy churchbell on a plate," or describes a tumor as a "terrible frog/ Of moonlight and dampness on a log." In "Binoculars," a meditation on consciousness takes on symbolic dimensions, leading to a memory of her mother's death: "The bird on the other side/ of my binoculars the cold life-light/ around its mind, which was never/ meant to be seen this clearly by a human being." Kasischke composed this true wonder of a book with remarkable care, heart, and skill.