Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Novelist and poet Howe approaches this spare yet cerebral collection of literary essays with a sense of "bewilderment": "What I have been thinking about, lately, is bewilderment as a way of entering the day as much as the work. Bewilderment as a poetics and a politics," like a dream that "hesitates, stands back, makes itself scared, circles and fizzles." Poetically challenging conventional structure and fixed ways of thinking, she divulges deeply personal battles with race and gender in the 60s and 70s; she ruminates on metaphorical fairies, which she considers the art within us; purgatory, the censoring, symbolic space that holds our hidden "true" selves in abeyance; and faith, which she has found through the Catholic church. Her prose shimmers and spins, weaving in stories of writers whose philosophies and struggles have informed her own, such as Simone Weil, Ilona Karmel, Thomas Hardy and Edith Stein, a Carmelite nun murdered by the Nazis despite her conversion from Judaism. Throughout, Howe poses key questions ("Can you wish a new world into being?"; "How does a change in vocabulary save your life?"; "What does it mean to finish writing a book?"), embracing doubt without sacrificing control. What does all this have to do with a wedding dress? The title refers to the Carmelite ceremony where nuns mark their spiritual transformation by abdicating their physical shells and pledging their eternal marriage to the invisible, the interior, the great empty future, which is un-nameable-in effect God-and represents Howe's own conversion to Catholicism. Her faith confronts and shapes the larger issues addressed here-politics and justice, language and words, and the role of the artist in our increasingly itinerant world-and results in a thoughtful and inspired meditation. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
This essay collection of meditations and thoughts by novelist and poet Howe (Gone: Poems) is an extraordinary joining of political, literary, religious, and personal ideas about imagination and the role of the artist. Howe's concepts of the future as time moving toward the present and emptiness as inward space and outward solitude illuminate many of the essays. "Catholic" and "After `Prologue'" discuss her Catholic faith, her deep personal emotions, and her difficult and harsh life in Boston in an interracial marriage; "Bewilderment" describes the artistic process as spiritual path; "Immanence" discusses the philosophic and religious writings of Edith Stein; "The Contemporary Logos" works through the modern search for religion. Some essays focus on a particular place, such as Ireland, Hardy's Wessex, Boston, and Los Angeles, while others are devoted to Edith Stein, Ilona Karmel, Thomas Hardy, and Simone Weil. Authors like Aquinas, Samuel Beckett, and William Blake and Jewish, Muslim, and Indian mystics are used as guideposts throughout the selections. Profound and finely written, this is highly recommended for most literature collections.-Gene Shaw, NYPL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.