Engine empire

Cathy Park Hong

Book - 2012

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

811.6/Hong
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 811.6/Hong Checked In
Published
New York : W.W. Norton & Co 2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Cathy Park Hong (-)
Edition
1st ed
Item Description
Poems.
Physical Description
95 p.
ISBN
9780393082845
  • Ballad of Our Jim
  • Fort Ballads
  • Ballad in O
  • Abecedarian Western
  • Ballad in A
  • Man that Scat
  • Bowietown Ballads
  • Ballad in I
  • The Song of Katydids
  • Shangdu, My Artful Boomtown!
  • Year of the Pig
  • Aubade
  • Market Forces Are Brighter Than the Sun
  • Adventures in Shangdu
  • The Engineer of Vertical Frontiers
  • A Little Tête-à-tête
  • Gift
  • Seed Sellers Sonnet
  • The World Cloud
  • Come Together
  • Year of the Amateur
  • Engines Within the Throne
  • A Visitation
  • The Infinite Reply
  • Ready-Made
  • Who's Who
  • A Wreath of Hummingbirds
  • The Golden State
  • The Quattrocento
  • Get Away from It All
  • Fable of the Last Untouched Town
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Hong's third book renders a triptych of frontiers-the Old West, the new East, and the digital world-where artistic acts are often tantamount to subversion. "Ballad of Our Jim," a sequence of cowboy ballads within ballads, follows a crew of outlaws and their kidnapped boy, a rebellious bard they christened "Jim," through an unsettled age when "the whole country is in a duel and we want no part of it." "Shangdu, My Artful Boomtown!" a mix of epistolary, prose, lyric, and persona poems, grapples with vocation and origin in a globalizing era, addressing directly and indirectly Shakespeare, Coleridge, and Berryman. Especially striking is "Adventures in Shangdu," a sequence of prose poems depicting a dystopia whose citizens include a factory worker reproducing Rembrandts and a prawn vendor executed for "tilt[ing] his surveillance camera so it caught nothing but the sun." Sharp and lyrical poems in "The World Cloud" take on digital realms, where "the search engine is inside us,/ the world is our display." This book is full of luminous surprises. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Hong's poetry engine generates imagined worlds that weirdly parallel the ones we know. The book (her third, after Dance Dance Revolution) has three parts, each set in a different milieu: a rollicking Wild West that mildly resembles California a la Michael Ondaatje's Billy the Kid; Shangdu, a prototype boomtown; and a cloud-based future in which one can recall "the antique ringtones of singing/ wrens, babbling babies, and ballad medleys.." If Shangdu recalls Coleridge's Xanadu or lime tree bower ("Shangdu, my artful boomtown!" is the section's title), it is also the scene of rampant, dehumanizing development, where Highrise Apartment 88 is erected so hurriedly that one whole wall is omitted. Throughout, even the words sound invented: telenovela, thip, harmine-but they're not. But Webster's won't get you too far in these regions, where people live to be 150 and cowboys scat sing, "I'm a natty cross-dressing/ wrestler in possum/ chaps, my boots can smash/ any clapboard slat.." The middle and final sections of this triptych are stronger than the first, where sound gets the better of sense, but much of this book is deliciously inventive. VERDICT A smart, disorienting look at our present-future set out in a rich hybrid language.-Ellen Kaufman, New York (c) Copyright 2012. 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.