编辑书架

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERARY REVIEWS PLOUGHSHARES Pub Date : 2024-07-12 DOI:10.1353/plo.2024.a932308
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The wonderful title poem, saved for last, is a syncopated memory of his 1950s youth, when he jumped into a police car stolen by ‘two young women’—‘the fall and precipice … that in the span of my life has never touched down.’ He was thrown out before the women were caught, but came to lead an adult life of ‘business flights,’ while craving ‘anything that lasts longer than a few minutes of escape.’”</p> <p><strong>DeWitt Henry</strong> recommends <em>Wintering Over: Poems</em>, by Susannah Lee (Finishing Line Press, 2024). “An impressive first collection, well-researched, imagined, and deeply lyrical both in voicing—‘Carmelite sisters (nine nuns, two novices and one postulant to be exact), who were relocated from Iceland to northern Norway, high above the Arctic Circle,’—and with poems reflecting the poet’s self, spirit, and relations to nature in rural western Massachusetts.”</p> <p><strong>DeWitt Henry</strong> recommends <em>Some Things I Said</em>, by David Ferry (Grolier Poetry Press, 2023). “Framed in tributes from family and admirers, the poet and translator’s final poem summarizes his oeuvre. Earlier poems are printed on left hand pages in black, and the poet’s ‘I was the one who said …’ excerpts appear in orange on facing, right hand pages. Grainy black and white photos by Ferry’s son appear on covers, frontispiece, midway, and at the very end. The overall effect is proud and poignant.”</p> <p><strong>Robert Pinsky</strong> recommends <em>The Blue Mimes</em>, by Sara Daniele Rivera (Graywolf Press, 2024). “These lucid, balletic poems <strong>[End Page 211]</strong> engage realities, including grief and laughter, and sometimes both at once, made all the more attractive by thinking and feeling in two languages and multiple cultures.”</p> <p><strong>Robert Pinsky</strong> recommends <em>Eggtooth</em>, by Jesse Nathan (Unbound Edition Press, 2023). “With its innovative, tuneful way of writing lines and a fresh, compelling way to understand immigration, ethnicity, American landscape, this book leaps beyond conventions and soars above stereotypes. Truly original, and fun to read.”</p> <p><strong>Gary Soto</strong> recommends <em>Dark Souvenirs</em>, by John Amen (New York Quarterly Books, 2024). “In the title poem, Amen writes, ‘Little mess, a little clean-up,’ a phrase that defines this heartbreaking work. He delves into family, music, friendships, tragic losses, a crossroad or two—all things that involve human nature. He writes a different poem from most. And that’s the beauty of this mature collection.”</p> <p><strong>David St. John</strong> recommends <em>Some Disenfranchised Evening</em>, by Gail Wronsky (Swan Scythe Press, 2024). “This new chapbook reminds us that Gail Wronsky is writing the most electrifying and eviscerating poems in American poetry. Remember the very first time you read a Leonora Carrington story or a Bill Knott poem? Get this book.”</p> <p><strong>Maura Stanton</strong> recommends Richard Newman’s fourth collection of poems, <em>Blues at the End of the World</em> (Kelsay Books, 2024). “Newman’s forceful voice and his great technical skill fill these lyric poems with original visions of our planet as he searches for home in the Marshall Islands, Japan, and Vietnam. A magnetic but subtle narrative connects these lyric poems, which take us around the world, giving us vivid portraits of stray dogs, ancestral graves, Saigon toilets and the mysterious encircling sea with its ‘infinite shades of blue.’”</p> <p><strong>Rosanna Warren</strong> recommends the novel <em>That They May Face the Rising Sun</em>, by John McGahern (Faber and Faber, 2002). “I came late to McGahern’s quietly visionary work. This is his last novel, published in 2002, winner of the Irish Novel of the Year in 2003. 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The wonderful title poem, saved for last, is a syncopated memory of his 1950s youth, when he jumped into a police car stolen by ‘two young women’—‘the fall and precipice … that in the span of my life has never touched down.’ He was thrown out before the women were caught, but came to lead an adult life of ‘business flights,’ while craving ‘anything that lasts longer than a few minutes of escape.’”</p> <p><strong>DeWitt Henry</strong> recommends <em>Wintering Over: Poems</em>, by Susannah Lee (Finishing Line Press, 2024). “An impressive first collection, well-researched, imagined, and deeply lyrical both in voicing—‘Carmelite sisters (nine nuns, two novices and one postulant to be exact), who were relocated from Iceland to northern Norway, high above the Arctic Circle,’—and with poems reflecting the poet’s self, spirit, and relations to nature in rural western Massachusetts.”</p> <p><strong>DeWitt Henry</strong> recommends <em>Some Things I Said</em>, by David Ferry (Grolier Poetry Press, 2023). “Framed in tributes from family and admirers, the poet and translator’s final poem summarizes his oeuvre. 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Truly original, and fun to read.”</p> <p><strong>Gary Soto</strong> recommends <em>Dark Souvenirs</em>, by John Amen (New York Quarterly Books, 2024). “In the title poem, Amen writes, ‘Little mess, a little clean-up,’ a phrase that defines this heartbreaking work. He delves into family, music, friendships, tragic losses, a crossroad or two—all things that involve human nature. He writes a different poem from most. And that’s the beauty of this mature collection.”</p> <p><strong>David St. John</strong> recommends <em>Some Disenfranchised Evening</em>, by Gail Wronsky (Swan Scythe Press, 2024). “This new chapbook reminds us that Gail Wronsky is writing the most electrifying and eviscerating poems in American poetry. Remember the very first time you read a Leonora Carrington story or a Bill Knott poem? Get this book.”</p> <p><strong>Maura Stanton</strong> recommends Richard Newman’s fourth collection of poems, <em>Blues at the End of the World</em> (Kelsay Books, 2024). “Newman’s forceful voice and his great technical skill fill these lyric poems with original visions of our planet as he searches for home in the Marshall Islands, Japan, and Vietnam. A magnetic but subtle narrative connects these lyric poems, which take us around the world, giving us vivid portraits of stray dogs, ancestral graves, Saigon toilets and the mysterious encircling sea with its ‘infinite shades of blue.’”</p> <p><strong>Rosanna Warren</strong> recommends the novel <em>That They May Face the Rising Sun</em>, by John McGahern (Faber and Faber, 2002). “I came late to McGahern’s quietly visionary work. This is his last novel, published in 2002, winner of the Irish Novel of the Year in 2003. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 前特约编辑的书架推荐书 劳拉-范登伯格推荐丹尼尔-萨尔达尼亚-帕里斯的《飞越怪物的飞机》(Catapult,2024 年 8 月)。"丹尼尔-萨尔达尼亚-帕里斯将城市写成了迷宫;这本奇妙的文集中的每篇文章都将读者引向私密与宇宙交汇的走廊。德维特-亨利推荐罗恩-斯莱特的《欢乐之旅》(卡内基梅隆出版社,2023 年)。"斯莱特的第三部诗集分为两部分,一部分是关于二战前土耳其的家庭出身的诗歌,另一部分是关于他的家人在占领期间逃离巴黎后在美国成长的诗歌。最后一首精彩的标题诗是他对 20 世纪 50 年代青年时代的切分回忆,当时他跳上了一辆被 "两个年轻女人 "偷走的警车--"坠落和悬崖......在我的一生中从未触及"。'他在那两个女人落网之前就被赶了出来,但成年后却过上了'公务飞行'的生活,同时渴望'任何事情都能比几分钟的逃亡更持久'"。德威特-亨利推荐《过冬》:诗集》,作者苏珊娜-李(Susannah Lee)(Finishing Line Press,2024 年)。"这是令人印象深刻的第一部诗集,经过精心研究,想象丰富,抒情深沉--'加尔默罗会修女(确切地说,是九位修女,两位新修女和一位后修会修女),她们从冰岛搬迁到挪威北部,高居北极圈之上'--诗歌反映了诗人的自我、精神以及在马萨诸塞州西部乡村与大自然的关系"。德维特-亨利推荐大卫-费里(David Ferry)的《我说过的一些话》(Grolier Poetry Press,2023 年)。"在家人和仰慕者的赞美声中,这位诗人兼翻译家的最后一首诗总结了他的作品。早期诗歌以黑色印在左页,诗人的'我是那个说......的人'节选以橙色印在正对的右页。封面、封底、中段和结尾处都有费里儿子拍摄的黑白照片。整体效果傲然而凄美"。罗伯特-平斯基推荐萨拉-丹尼尔-里维拉(Sara Daniele Rivera)的《蓝色哑剧》(灰狼出版社,2024 年)。"这些清晰的芭蕾舞诗 [尾页 211]涉及现实,包括悲伤和欢笑,有时两者同时出现,以两种语言和多元文化进行思考和感受,使其更具吸引力"。罗伯特-平斯基推荐杰西-内森的《蛋牙》(无界版出版社,2023 年)。"这本书以其创新的、曲调优美的行文方式,以及一种全新的、引人入胜的方式来理解移民、种族、美国景观,它超越了传统,飞跃了刻板印象。真正原汁原味,读来乐趣无穷。"加里-索托推荐约翰-阿门的《黑暗纪念品》(纽约季刊出版社,2024 年)。"在标题诗中,阿门写道:'一点混乱,一点清理',这句话定义了这部令人心碎的作品。他深入探讨了家庭、音乐、友谊、悲惨的损失、一两个十字路口--所有涉及人性的东西。他写出了与大多数人不同的诗。这就是这部成熟诗集的魅力所在。大卫-圣约翰(David St. John)推荐盖尔-沃伦斯基(Gail Wronsky)的《一些被剥夺权利的夜晚》(Swan Scythe Press,2024 年)。"这本新的小诗集提醒我们,盖尔-沃伦斯基正在创作美国诗歌中最震撼人心、最令人痛心疾首的诗歌。还记得你第一次读莱奥诺拉-卡林顿的故事或比尔-诺特的诗吗?买这本书吧"。莫拉-斯坦顿推荐理查德-纽曼的第四部诗集《世界尽头的蓝调》(凯尔塞书店,2024 年)。"纽曼的声音铿锵有力,技艺精湛,这些抒情诗充满了他在马绍尔群岛、日本和越南寻找家园时对地球的原创性想象。磁性而微妙的叙事将这些抒情诗连接起来,带我们环游世界,为我们生动描绘了流浪狗、祖坟、西贡厕所和神秘的环绕着'无限深浅的蓝色'的大海"。罗珊娜-沃伦(Rosanna Warren)推荐约翰-麦克加亨(John McGahern)的小说《他们可以面对冉冉升起的太阳》(Faber and Faber,2002 年)。"我很晚才接触到麦加赫恩静谧而富有远见的作品。这是他的最后一部小说,2002 年出版,2003 年获得爱尔兰年度小说奖。麦克加亨在爱尔兰创造了一个完整的乡村小镇,带领读者经历了四季轮回、打草、照料羊群和花园的劳作,[尾页 212]以及复杂的...
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Editors' Shelf
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Editors’ Shelf

Book Recommendations from Our Former Guest Editors

Laura van den Berg recommends Planes Flying Over a Monster, by Daniel Saldaña París (Catapult, August 2024). “Daniel Saldaña París writes about cities as labyrinths; each essay in this marvelous collection leads readers to corridors where the intimate and the cosmic intersect.”

DeWitt Henry recommends Joy Ride, by Ron Slate (Carnegie Melon Press, 2023). “Slate’s third collection is divided between poems about family origins in pre-WWII Turkey and poems about growing up in America after his family escaped from Paris during the Occupation. The wonderful title poem, saved for last, is a syncopated memory of his 1950s youth, when he jumped into a police car stolen by ‘two young women’—‘the fall and precipice … that in the span of my life has never touched down.’ He was thrown out before the women were caught, but came to lead an adult life of ‘business flights,’ while craving ‘anything that lasts longer than a few minutes of escape.’”

DeWitt Henry recommends Wintering Over: Poems, by Susannah Lee (Finishing Line Press, 2024). “An impressive first collection, well-researched, imagined, and deeply lyrical both in voicing—‘Carmelite sisters (nine nuns, two novices and one postulant to be exact), who were relocated from Iceland to northern Norway, high above the Arctic Circle,’—and with poems reflecting the poet’s self, spirit, and relations to nature in rural western Massachusetts.”

DeWitt Henry recommends Some Things I Said, by David Ferry (Grolier Poetry Press, 2023). “Framed in tributes from family and admirers, the poet and translator’s final poem summarizes his oeuvre. Earlier poems are printed on left hand pages in black, and the poet’s ‘I was the one who said …’ excerpts appear in orange on facing, right hand pages. Grainy black and white photos by Ferry’s son appear on covers, frontispiece, midway, and at the very end. The overall effect is proud and poignant.”

Robert Pinsky recommends The Blue Mimes, by Sara Daniele Rivera (Graywolf Press, 2024). “These lucid, balletic poems [End Page 211] engage realities, including grief and laughter, and sometimes both at once, made all the more attractive by thinking and feeling in two languages and multiple cultures.”

Robert Pinsky recommends Eggtooth, by Jesse Nathan (Unbound Edition Press, 2023). “With its innovative, tuneful way of writing lines and a fresh, compelling way to understand immigration, ethnicity, American landscape, this book leaps beyond conventions and soars above stereotypes. Truly original, and fun to read.”

Gary Soto recommends Dark Souvenirs, by John Amen (New York Quarterly Books, 2024). “In the title poem, Amen writes, ‘Little mess, a little clean-up,’ a phrase that defines this heartbreaking work. He delves into family, music, friendships, tragic losses, a crossroad or two—all things that involve human nature. He writes a different poem from most. And that’s the beauty of this mature collection.”

David St. John recommends Some Disenfranchised Evening, by Gail Wronsky (Swan Scythe Press, 2024). “This new chapbook reminds us that Gail Wronsky is writing the most electrifying and eviscerating poems in American poetry. Remember the very first time you read a Leonora Carrington story or a Bill Knott poem? Get this book.”

Maura Stanton recommends Richard Newman’s fourth collection of poems, Blues at the End of the World (Kelsay Books, 2024). “Newman’s forceful voice and his great technical skill fill these lyric poems with original visions of our planet as he searches for home in the Marshall Islands, Japan, and Vietnam. A magnetic but subtle narrative connects these lyric poems, which take us around the world, giving us vivid portraits of stray dogs, ancestral graves, Saigon toilets and the mysterious encircling sea with its ‘infinite shades of blue.’”

Rosanna Warren recommends the novel That They May Face the Rising Sun, by John McGahern (Faber and Faber, 2002). “I came late to McGahern’s quietly visionary work. This is his last novel, published in 2002, winner of the Irish Novel of the Year in 2003. McGahern creates a whole, small, rural town in Ireland, leading the reader through the turning seasons, and the labors of haying and tending sheep and gardens, [End Page 212] and the complex...

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PLOUGHSHARES
PLOUGHSHARES Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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