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Falling Through the Music [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 277 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x4 mm, weight: 118 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2007
  • Izdevniecība: University of Notre Dame Press
  • ISBN-10: 0268030812
  • ISBN-13: 9780268030810
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  • Cena: 20,89 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 277 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x4 mm, weight: 118 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2007
  • Izdevniecība: University of Notre Dame Press
  • ISBN-10: 0268030812
  • ISBN-13: 9780268030810
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
“The mood of Mark Halperin's new poems is autumnal and elegiac, yet the effect of his book is surprisingly bracing. This is due in no small measure to Halperin's persona—he is trustworthy, unflappable, and a wryly unjudgmental observer of human folly. And, as readers of his work have come to know, his command of technique, whether of received form or of the prose poem, is considerable. This makes both his tender poems of family history and his poems drawn from his travels in Russia acts of wonderment.” —David Wojahn
“The music here—form, rhyme, language and meaning, geometry and identity—is gorgeous: 'All I can't hear gives me trouble now, as the dead do, falling through the music' ('At the Concert'). Here are poems that adhere by sound—of family, memory, loss, and love—all captured by a brilliant poet who teaches as he goes. Lucky readers.” —Hilda Raz, author of Trans and Divine Honors
“Falling Through the Music is a book about high middle age when entropy, mortality, and overall decline cease to be rumor and feel more or less like the beginning of something that, for all its fear and sadness, promises to be fundamentally interesting. The poems range from the personal and familial across cultures and across other boundaries into the affirmations of art. This is the place where the artistic impulse does not save one from falling through music into death and nothingness, but somehow the companionship of art seems to be the best counterbalance to the terrors. Halperin deftly conjoins the mortal fears of advancing age with fears that one inherits through family and history, with the fear that there is really nothing stable or salvific in the world unless it is what we create. And therein resides the greater pleasure of this book—the sense that what is created is all we have and must be treasured for that. In short, this is a book of considerable emotional sophistication and impact.” —Frederick Marchant, Suffolk University, Boston
In Falling Through the Music, his fifth major book of poetry, Mark Halperin gives us consolation, guidance, and companionship while delivering an accomplished meditation on the first real glimpses of the limits on a life. Displaying an agility of formal invention—he moves easily from a Whitmanesque and witty litany to rhymed quatrains—Halperin deftly melds technique to theme. As in “Someone Pausing, he is able to place us in the mind of someone—any one of us—who has stood on an island in the street, fully attentive and present, knowing nothing stays, not even the observer.

Recenzijas

"Falling Through the Music concerns itself with the mind's accommodation of 'gaps' in time. Both personal and historical memory limit the past's liabilities. . . . First-time readers of Halperin . . . will return to his work again and again . . . for the benefits of a disciplined imagination, a mature and rigorous skepticism, a breadth of experience that by making modest claims for itself, yields much." Notre Dame Review

"Mark Halperin's wry poems are easy to love: what's "The Trouble with Spring"? It ends. "Valentine" begins, "Say the heart's principal industry is worry . . . ." The poet generously believes the great poets of the past no matter their flaws of character and behavior (which he notes); his poems ironically defend lying and the shedding of sincerity (they do, or seem to), and they also notice "for the aristocracy, friend / and servant are so close they seem to blend." Halperin's observations, like his syntax, are little surprises, eloquent and fair. "the guilt / without reason of survivors who react / much later, the slide and blank after impact." ("After the Crash") The music hereform, rhyme, language and meaning, geometry and identityis gorgeous: "All I can't hear gives me trouble now, as the dead do, falling through the music" ("At the Concert"). Here are poems that adhere by soundof family, memory, loss, and loveall captured by a brilliant poet who teaches as he goes. Lucky readers." Hilda Raz, author of Trans and Divine Honors

The mood of Mark Halperin's new poems is autumnal and elegiac, yet the effect of his book is surprisingly bracing. This is due in no small measure to Halperin's personahe is trustworthy, unflappable, and a wryly unjudgmental observer of human folly. And, as readers of his work have come to know, his command of technique, whether of received form or of the prose poem, is considerable. This makes both his tender poems of family history and his poems drawn from his travels in Russia acts of wonderment." David Wojahn

"Falling Through the Music is a book about high middle age when entropy, mortality, and overall decline cease to be rumor and feel more or less like the beginning of something that, for all its fear and sadness, promises to be fundamentally interesting. The poems range from the personal and familial across cultures and across other boundaries into the affirmations of art. This is the place where the artistic impulse does not save one from falling through music into death and nothingness, but somehow the companionship of art seems to be the best counterbalance to the terrors. Halperin deftly conjoins the mortal fears of advancing age with fears that one inherits through family and history, with the fear that there is really nothing stable or salvific in the world unless it is what we create. And therein resides the greater pleasure of this bookthe sense that what is created is all we have and must be treasured for that. In short, this is a book of considerable emotional sophistication and impact." Frederick Marchant, Suffolk University, Boston

I
Reading at the Beach
3(2)
Pop
5(1)
My Mother's Words
6(1)
Growing Up
7(2)
Lying
9(2)
Sincerity
11(1)
Guildenstern to Horatio
12(1)
Other Languages
13(1)
Retirement
14(2)
Waking to Love
16(1)
Rembrandt's Prodigal Son
17(3)
Babel
20(5)
II
Returns
25(1)
After the Crash
26(1)
Buying Jewelry in Saint Petersburg
27(1)
Notes on the Russian Elevator
28(2)
Now and Then
30(1)
Other Rooms
31(1)
At the Concert
32(1)
Fear
33(1)
Love's Needs
34(1)
Saint Petersburg to Moscow Train
35(4)
III
Autumn Elsewhere
39(1)
Variation on a Theme from Donne
40(1)
Tulips
41(1)
Padua
42(1)
Someone Pausing
43(1)
Venetian Sonnets
44(2)
Standouts
46(1)
Parakeet
47(1)
Blue Heron
48(1)
The Trouble with Spring
49(1)
Identical Twins
50(3)
IV
Valentine
53(1)
Among the Dead
54(1)
Strokes
55(1)
On Certainty
56(1)
Talonichkaya Vodka
57(2)
Accident
59(1)
Empty Places
60(1)
Orders
61(2)
Lines
63(1)
Lightness
64
Mark Halperin taught at Central Washington University and has taught in Japan, Estonia, Russia, and Ukraine. His poetry books have been published by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Wesleyan University Press, and Copper Canyon Press. His poems and translations have appeared in a variety of journals. Halperin lives outside of Ellensburg, Washington, near the Yakima River.