Jump soul New and selected poems

Charlie Smith, 1947-

Book - 2014

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811.54/Smith
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 811.54/Smith Withdrawn
Subjects
Published
New York : W.W. Norton & Company [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Charlie Smith, 1947- (-)
Edition
First Edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xiii, 230 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780393240221
  • Godzilla Street: New Poems
  • 1. Jane Street
  • Jump Soul
  • Better Than Heaven
  • Ports of Call
  • Who Knows If That Would Work
  • If Anything Can
  • Gain
  • Monsters
  • Why We're Here
  • In the Guest Room
  • Shakespeare in the Villages
  • As Ever As Ever
  • Crossing Washington Square at Dawn
  • Life on Earth
  • Blue Pills
  • The Plot Is the One Thing We Know
  • Collected First Lines
  • Just a Note
  • On Down
  • 2. House Trailer in a Field
  • Little Georgias
  • Used to Be More One-Eyed Men
  • It Gets a Little Hazy
  • Green Life Where It Goes
  • Night Squishes the Sun Out Along the Treeline
  • Before We Get There
  • Turpentine
  • The River
  • Whom Mothers Steer Their Children From
  • October Memorial
  • This Before That
  • Spell
  • Thoughts Like a Series of Night Departures
  • Red Cotton
  • Fresh Rolls on Sunday
  • 3. East Washerwoman Shoal
  • Delirious
  • Originality (1)
  • Originality (2)
  • Taps in Key West
  • Supposition
  • Rummage
  • Don Diego de la Vega on Block Patrol
  • What's Essential
  • Water in the Lungs
  • Bus to Tuxtla
  • Dengue
  • As If You Were
  • Offhand
  • Selected Poems
  • from Red Roads
  • Dr. Auchincloss Bids Good-bye to His Wife
  • Liar
  • from Indistinguishable from the Darkness
  • Aquarium
  • Fortune
  • Transformation to White
  • Kohaku
  • Cycles
  • Now I Smack My Head
  • The Meaning of Birds
  • Respite
  • from The Palms
  • This Holy Enterprise
  • The Woman as Figure
  • The Palms
  • Omnipotence
  • Redneck Riviera
  • Mother at Eighty
  • The Rose
  • from Before and After
  • The Sentinel
  • Defiance
  • Ruffians
  • The Business
  • The Essential Story
  • Conceit
  • There Is No Railroad Named Delight
  • Anticipation
  • The Miniature City
  • from Heroin and Other Poems
  • Real Time
  • Louisiana Purchase
  • The World as Will and Representation
  • Straight
  • Los Dos Rancheros
  • Honesty
  • Family Burial
  • Beds
  • Calling for Clare
  • As for Trees
  • The Trail
  • Indians Driving Pickup Trucks
  • I Try to Remember I Am Dying
  • Kicking
  • Zen Do
  • Heroin II
  • Moon, Moon
  • Dreams
  • The Submerged Fields
  • Visitation
  • Washington Square
  • Bontemps
  • Santa Monica
  • The Waters of the Deep
  • East End
  • At This Hour
  • from Women of America
  • Eastern Forests
  • There's Trouble Everywhere
  • What This Stands For
  • Women of America
  • Monkeys in White Satin
  • Recall
  • In July
  • Shame
  • Compared to What
  • Modern Art
  • Late Days
  • 1. Outside Las Vegas
  • Pursued by Love's Demons
  • Solitude
  • Old Business
  • Talking to Whom
  • Each Night I Enter a Terrible Silence
  • Call Girls
  • The Night Won't Stop It
  • Creation Rites
  • A Selection Process
  • Excursion
  • Religious Art
  • Arrangements
  • Sprung
  • Dusk at Homer's
  • Day 7/24
  • The Moment Preceding
  • Old Nobodies Traveling Alone
  • The Wilderness
  • Dusk, Like the Messiah
  • from Word Comix
  • I Speak to Fewer People
  • Evasive Action
  • Abuses in the Big Hotels
  • One Lie After Another
  • Evergreens
  • The Paris of Stories
  • Hollyhocks
  • Like Odysseus, Like Achilles
  • Little Swan Songs Being Sung All Down the Block
  • Illustrated Guide to Familiar American Trees
  • An Orange Light in the Windows
  • Arthritis
  • Out of the Way Bungalow-Style Areas
  • As It Happened
  • Summer in the Subtropics
  • Lariats
  • Oh Yeah
  • About This Far
  • Meaty Chunks
  • Leaves in the Subway
  • Extremadura
  • Chalk Pictures
  • Pied Noir
  • The Greeks
  • The Fall Schedule
  • The Adepts
  • Unburnt Offerings
  • Clean
  • Compensation
  • Index of Titles and First Lines
Review by Booklist Review

Prolific Smith, author most recently of the haunting, noirlike novels Men in Miami Hotels (2013) and Three Delays (2010), brings together new and earlier poems in this scintillating collection. In new works, Smith blends his down-home sense of southern intensity with an antiquarian fondness for lost figures: dauphins and ducats, Victor Hugo-style clerics, the gaudy epaulettes of chinaberry trees and crepe myrtles, swimming in mossy cloudbanks of used alyssum. These are fast, brief poems, packed with lavish atmosphere and intricate language, delicacies to savor repeatedly. Equally alluring, the book draws from Smith's seven previous collections of poetry, including the frank and harrowing Heroin and Other Poems (2000), the fervent, tumultuous Before and After (1995), and the brash, passionate The Palms (1993). The retrospective selections consistently strike an emotional human core, like a lump of chalcedony in / your gut. Readers familiar with Smith's audacious style will relish the new work and appreciate the compendium of selected poems. For anyone unfamiliar, this is a necessary starting point into the oeuvre of an unmatched American poet.--Baez, Diego Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet and novelist Smith (Word Comix) opens with a generous offering of new poems before selecting from his seven previous collections. He finds beauty in past addictions and broken marriages, a teeming mesh of impenetrable wordiness, sorrow, and intricately textured environments. Smith explores regret while moving forward with equal abandon: "I'd walk out on myself if I could," he writes in "Late Days." His poems work best when stripped of their habit of big-word bravado: "sometimes what passes on from us/ has little to do with what we hoped, but nonetheless/ carries word of who we were and what we found." Often compared to Charles Wright for his rich descriptions of place, Smith should also be acknowledged for his smart poetic turns-he often ends poems with an open door, an ominous or luminous cadence. "As For Trees" employs lush arboreal images as a loose timeline for the women he has known: "spatters of scarlet in the white, vague yellow musings, blue silk bits, rouged lip skin peeled off and crumpled up." "Beds" echoes his dynamic movement through life: "nights of delightful smells,/ nights on the river, by the sea, inland nights/ spoken of in hushed voices, nights by the wayside,/ nights come to bed late for no reason." (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

Smith is an Aga Khan Prize-winning author of fiction (Crystal River) and the winner of the National Poetry Series Award for his debut, Red Roads. His sixth collection combines elements of both genres and exemplifies his style. The poems generally have lengthy, proselike (but not prosaic) lines, reminiscent of poetry by Walt Whitman. Their overall subject is the will to survive despite disillusionment. The bleakest poems-e.g., "I Speak to Fewer People"-echo Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot, while other, more upbeat works focus on a moment of saving grace; "Dusk Like the Messiah" ends by combining meaning and mystery: "unencumbered tenderness seeps into crevices and conventions where the one speaking,/ for just a second looks up from the discourse and goes quiet as he gets it." VERDICT With their long, loose lines, the best poems here rush down the page until they reach their just-right end. They don't run out of energy but instead stop to contemplate what happened and why. In that split second, the words flash their often brilliant message.-C. Diane Scharper, Towson Univ., MD (c) Copyright 2014. 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.