Collected Poems by Galway Kinnell
2018; University of Oklahoma; Volume: 92; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1353/wlt.2018.0186
ISSN1945-8134
Autores Tópico(s)Irish and British Studies
ResumoGalway Kinnell Collected Poems New York. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 2017. 591 pages. At nearly six hundred pages, this beautifully produced book is comprised of eleven sections of poetry (Galway Kinnell’s ten books and a section of his last finished poems not previously published in book form), an insightful nineteen-page introduction by Edward Hirsch that connects Kinnell’s evolving poetic style with developments in the poet’s thought and life, a biographical afterword, notes, and an index. One additional lovely feature is the inclusion of a photograph at the head of each section that is contemporaneous with the time of the original book publication. As did his friend and fellow poet, James Wright, Kinnell began by writing poetry in traditional accentual-syllabic lines, often with end-rhyme, but in time (as did Wright) he permitted himself to write in rhythmic free verse, influenced by Walt Whitman. To read this collection from the start is to experience the evolution of Kinnell ’s understanding of poetic form but also to witness his unique voice and sensibility, essentially present from the earliest years. Free-verse rhythms, however, were not the only influence of Whitman; Kinnell also sings the “body electric,” and he knows that the metaphysical is and must be experienced with—if not actually through— the physical. In many of his poems, we may feel that we are fully immersed in a description of something material (sometimes sexual), only to find ourselves pivoting in a moment to an instance of great emotional depth. Open this book to nearly any page and an instance will present itself. This recognition of the importance of the body extends to the bodies of words themselves—namely, their existence in sound. In his midcareer, when he gave guest lectures on the music of poetry, Kinnell would bring a recording he had made of the sounds of various animals—crickets, frogs, birds, whales, wolves—and he would remark that all species with voices used rhythm to communicate with one another, along with other aspects of song. Kinnell loved the bodies of words, not just their denotations. In “Blackberry Eating,” we read: “the ripest berries / fall almost unbidden to my tongue, / as words sometimes do, certain peculiar words / like strengths or squinched, / many-lettered, one-syllable lumps, / which I squeeze, squinch open, and splurge well.” Yet this is not the only side to Kinnell: he is equally fond of humor and wordplay , which too can suddenly pivot to the serious and emotionally resonant. If the material, the body, is the home of the spiritual , the body is not in itself that which is ultimately sought, though celebrated. In one poem of consolation, we read: “Forget about being emaciated. Think of the wren / and how little flesh is needed to make a Nota Bene Jo Nesbø Macbeth Trans. Don Bartlett Hogarth Translated from the Norwegian, Jo Nesbø’s Macbeth is a retelling of Shakespeare’s play set in a 1970s town cloaked in industrial drear and fraught with substance abuse. The intrigue for which the original play is known takes place amid the police force and the inner rings of the town’s drug trade, hinging on an ambitious Inspector Macbeth in this crime thriller packed with adrenaline, manipulation, and detailed prose. Chuma Nwokolo The Extinction of Menai Ohio University Press An unethical drug trial has beset the Niger village of Kreektown, causing the downfall of the entire Menai culture . Characters spanning the globe star in this novel alongside a spiritual leader trying to preserve the soul of his people. Nwokolo touches on bioethics and language extinction; his prose is steeped in imagery, surrounding readers in a fictional but representative time and place with shocking relevance to modern history. WORLDLIT.ORG 79 song.” In other words, in poem after poem, even the ones seemingly abandoned to the sensual, we find a poet of remarkable depth and originality who finds in the corporeal world that which animates it and gives it meaning. Kinnell is also importantly influenced by Rilke, especially his Duino Elegies, and like Rilke he bears witness to a world that wants to be seen by us and arise again in song. Of all the poets of his...
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