Deep lane Poems

Mark Doty

Book - 2015

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : W. W. Norton & Company [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Mark Doty (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
93 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780393070231
  • Deep Lane (When I'm down on my knees...)
  • Deep Lane (June 23rd...)
  • Deep Lane (We began to think...)
  • Deep Lane (Into Eden ...)
  • Deep Lane (Down there the little ...)
  • Crystal
  • Perfect Repose
  • Deep Lane (I'm resting on a bench ...)
  • The King of Fire Island
  • Little Mammoth
  • Apparition (I'm carrying ...)
  • Hungry Ghost
  • Deep Lane (Whose black ...)
  • Apparition (At the kitchen sink ...)
  • God-Box
  • Underworld
  • Ars Poetica: 14th Street Gym
  • Verge
  • Robert Harms Paints the Surface of Little Fresh Pond
  • Pescadero
  • Not Without
  • Apparition (Bitter wind...)
  • What Is the Grass?
  • Ineradicable Music
  • Immanence
  • Robinson Jeffers
  • Ithaca
  • The Lesson
  • To Jackson Pollock
  • Deep Lane (Trying to pick ...)
  • Meadow Church
  • This Your Home Now
  • Deep Lane (November and this road's ...)
  • Spent
  • Amagansett Cherry
Review by Booklist Review

In the first in a series of poems titled Deep Lane, the speaker is in a position of archetypal resonance. He is on his knees, digging into the dark of the earth. He is also contemplating the banked flame of life, the work of worms, the wild unsayable. Doty embraces the glorious tradition of nature poetry and brings to it much yearning, inquisitiveness, and gentle mockery. How supple and seamless these lyrics are, how fleet and buoyant, however delving their subjects. This National Book Award and National Book Critics Circle Award winner reaches to the very DNA of human perplexity as he reminds us that all the pulsing beauty of the world is dancing its way to death. A man out walking at twilight realizes that his exuberant dog has pulled up a stake marking a grave. One fish survives winter, another is snatched by a heron. Doty writes of paradise and ticks, a syringe-delivered high, visitations from the afterlife, a man playing a violin in a subway station. How, he wonders, can the soul be / understood A gracefully ravishing collection.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2015 Booklist

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

Doty (Sweet Machine), whose Fire to Fire won the 2008 National Book Award, will sate his many admirers with this eighth collection. Having gained renown for his self-consciously beautiful, heart-on-sleeve elegies about the devastations of HIV/AIDS, Doty remains elegiac and continues to attend to beauty. He also does some of his best work yet as a nature poet. Wayward mammals, urban saplings, beaches, forests, and yards (as in the eight poems all titled "Deep Lane") stand for the omnipresence of mortality, and the persistence of wild desire: a "Little Mammoth," "milk-tusks not even/ sprouted," drowns in a prehistoric clay pit; "the striped snake in the garden loves me/ so fiercely she never comes near." The people in the poems-a needle-drug addict, a survivor of a suicide attempt-make frightening choices, though such choices seem natural to them. We are animals too, says Doty, but we inscribe our choices in language-such as the choice to greet the day, or to look backward on friends and lovers and previous poems. The longest (perhaps the best) work connects a shuttered barbershop on 18th Street in Manhattan to the other losses in Doty's memory: "I have not forgotten one of you," he prays, "may I never forget one of you-these layers of men,/ arrayed in the dark in their no-longer breathing ranks." (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

In the first line of this ruminative and personal new book by Doty, winner of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, we find the poet on his knees rustically pulling up wild mustard. But the tone dampens down quickly; by line three he's "talking to the anvil of darkness." As he plunges beneath the surface to find "the wild unsayable," the poet soon encounters "the roar// in the blood rising without volition"; a poem on taking drugs finds him "riding all night on Tear Me Apart Road" and experiencing "an astonishing present tense/ blown open seven ways from the hour." But if the mission here is to achieve that rearing, galloping energy, the poetry itself retains the controlled craft for which Doty is known, the sturdy specificity that he identifies in one poem as the soul of a white fish in his garden pond. Hence some uneasy tension in the collection itself. In "The King of Fire Island," identifying with the injured deer he's been feeding, the poet observes, "You must have been weary of that form,/ as I grow weary of my head," and, indeed, there is weariness here, too. VERDICT A somber, struggling, honest collection for Doty's many fans.-Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal (c) Copyright 2015. 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.