Alone and not alone

Ron Padgett, 1942-

Book - 2015

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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Published
Minneapolis : Coffee House Press [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Ron Padgett, 1942- (-)
Edition
First Edition
Physical Description
89 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781566894012
  • What Poem
  • The Roman Numerals
  • Butterfly
  • Reality
  • The Chinese Girl
  • Smudges
  • It Takes Two
  • The First Time
  • Circles
  • Grandpa Brushed His Teeth
  • Coffee Man
  • Where Is My Head?
  • Survivor Guilt
  • The Young Cougar
  • Radio in the Distance
  • Face Value
  • The Plank and the Screw
  • 102 Today
  • The Pounding Rabbit
  • Mountains and Songs
  • It All Depends
  • The Elevation of Ideals
  • Birgitte Hohlenberg
  • Pep Talk
  • Preface to Philosophy
  • You Know What
  • A Bit about Bishop Berkeley
  • The Step Theory
  • My '75 Chevy
  • For A
  • Art Lessons
  • A Few Ideas about Rabbits
  • The Value of Discipline
  • Pea Jacket
  • The Ukrainian Museum
  • The 1870s
  • One Thing Led to Another
  • The Rabbi with a Puzzle Voice
  • Syntactical Structures
  • The World of Us
  • Curtain
  • Homage to Meister Eckhart
  • The Incoherent Behavior of Most Lawn Furniture
  • This Schoolhouse Look
  • The Street
  • Paris Again
  • London, 1815
  • Of Copse and Coppice
  • Manifestation and Mustache
  • Shipwreck in General
  • French Art in the 1950s Three Poems in Honor of Willem de Kooning
  • I Felt
  • The Door to the River
  • Zot
  • Alone and Not Alone.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Can a prolific poet produce a breakthrough book after age 70? Padgett might have done it here: the casual, almost diffident, jazz-influenced New York School poet, whose Collected Poems won the L.A. Times Book Prize in 2013, follows up with a volume whose charm, ease, and humor should please casual readers unfamiliar with his previous work as well as fans who have enjoyed him for decades. "Reality has a transparent veneer," he quips, "that looks exactly like the veneer beneath it"; Padgett's clear, even faux-naive poems sometimes imitate ballads and nursery rhymes, or else veer into sweetly bizarre anecdotes in prose. He pays attention to how children think and to what grown-ups can learn from them-the collection is dedicated to his son, Wayne, and features poems about his grandson, Marcello. Zhuangzi's butterfly, self-propelled lawn furniture, "the Step Theory of Reality/ and its by-product the Ziggurat Configuration" all pop out of poems that connect the poet to the world he enjoys. "Don't go around all day/ thinking about life," Padgett advises; "doing so will raise a barrier/ between you and its instants./ You need those instants," he continues "and I need you to be in them with me." A poet who can say that after decades of work deserves many admirers. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved