Null Set
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- 14,99 €
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- 14,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
Null Set collects the slightly obsessive possibilities that rise when we give them the space—odd jobs, trouble-making, and farm boy rambling, all in dialogue with mathematics, or William Faulkner, or other poets.
From "Hypotenuse":
HYPOTENUSE
I write three, erase it, blow rubber
shavings from the desk. Write its notation,
erase it, blow shavings. Then three 3s
erased, shavings blown, persist
for the nonce, three of nothing, nowhere
attending to discrete objects for counting,
themselves objects at any rate. To kiss,
sleep, and focus we know to close
our eyes, imagine. I do, see nothing.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"This is not going to be/ transcendent," writes Mathys (The Spoils) in his third book, a collection of cultured, emotionally vulnerable poems in which he seeks meaning within the bounds of the absolute while simultaneously reaching toward the unknowable, even via negation and denial. Mathys alternates between two poles, employing a "smooth mindlessness" as he luxuriates in making phoneme smash-ups and, more often, constructing logical arguments in an effort "To routinize/ failure into a form of hoping." Perhaps skeptical of conventional poetic means of exploring vulnerability, Mathys overloads the system, crashes the hard drive, and then sorts through the bits. When an airline companion lists trinkets he once collected from the sea, Mathys "seek these objects in clouds, work to assemble them into a master scene," realizing that "Content is irrelevant if I can find a pattern, but I can't." It's possible for something to exist outside of the knowable set, a concept Mathys expands upon in the book's final poem, "All," as he meanders deep into stored memories for surprising, idiosyncratic details. The result is overwhelming: "I meant to do some good/ from inside the blown fuse, but confronted/ personhood." In confronting the fear "that I've already said too much," Mathys finds that it is "better to light a candle than curse darkness."