The Trees The Trees
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- 39,00 kr
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- 39,00 kr
Publisher Description
'Heather Christle's poems may well be one of the places readers turn when they want to know what it was like to be young and paying attention in the early 21st century . . . Her poems are wide awake' Mark Doty
In The Trees The Trees, each new line is a sharp turn toward joy and heartbreak, and each poem unfolds like a bat through the wild meaninglessness of the world.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In her quirky second outing Christle writes short blocks of prose without punctuation, phrases separated by white space, so that we seem to be reading verse and prose at once, delivered with a rapt attention somewhere between the later W. S. Merwin and James Schuyler. (PW, alas, cannot accurately reproduce those spaces.) Once used to the form, a reader can see what's inside: often, a delightful, absurd character. "I am a handbag I am the kind of handbag nobody weeps into," says one. Christle's metamorphic personae let us work to figure out lives unlike ours: in one poem, she says she is "trying to understand a house from the nailgun's perspective." But the poems grow sad as they look back, and they say why: "the world was different because it looked different and it still likes us but we don't like it back." "Spring Poem for Harpo" situates Christle in a comic tradition that extends outside poetry, into ancient epigram and modern film comedy: "if we did not have skin," Christle says to or for Harpo Marx, "we would not have gladness... the sun will one day grow so glad it will destroy us." Christle has made an ingenious debut.