Elegy for a broken machine Poems

Patrick Phillips, 1970-

Book - 2015

"The poet Patrick Phillips joins our list with a stunning collection of elegies that bear witness to the small beauties and inevitable losses of our transient life"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Patrick Phillips, 1970- (-)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi Book"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
viii, 66 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780385353755
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Phillips (Boy) examines masculinity and loss with a surgeon's precision in his elegiac third book. The poems occupy a space that is, in his own words, "Something like sadness/ like joy, like a sudden/ love for my life,// and for the body/ in which I have lived it,/ overtaking me all at once." The figures of father and son, brother and husband, all play out here-often simultaneously-and Phillips's careful language consciously breaks down these distinctions, fusing the roles men play throughout their lives, and connecting past to present. While at his son's soccer game, the poet observes that "the father/ of my son's friend/ watched his father die," and in doing so sees "the truth about love, about all of us,/ so plain in him/ there was nothing left// but to pretend I was not watching." Phillips scrapes away nostalgia to reveal raw, sparse reflections. He writes of a body: "Soon the undertaker's sons/ will come and lift this/ strangest of all strange things:// a palimpsest/ of what we loved,/ a nest in the brittle leaves." And Phillips ponders just what makes a human body different from any other relinquished object, imagining his mattress decaying at the dump "as it sloughs its guts into the dirt." (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Elegy for a Broken Machine My father was trying to fix something and I sat there just watching, like I used to, whenever something went wrong. I kept asking where he'd been, until he put down a wrench and said Listen: dying's just something that happens sometimes. Who knows where that kind of dream comes from? Why some things vanish, and some just keep going forever? Like that look on his face when he'd stare off at something I could never make out in the murky garage, his ear pressed to whatever it was that had died-- his eyes listening for something so deep inside it, I thought even the silence, if you listened, meant something. ***** Old Love You, lovely beyond all lovely, who I've loved since I first looked into your blue beyond blue eyes, are no longer anywhere on earth the girl these words call out to, though never, since, have I not been a darkening wood she walks through. *****  The Guitar It came with those scratches from all their belt buckles, palm-dark with their sweat like the stock of a gun: an arc of pickmarks cut clear through the lacquer where all the players before me once strummed--once thumbed these same latches where it sleeps in green velvet. Once sang, as I sing, the old songs. There's no end, there's no end to this world, everlasting. We crumble to dust in its arms. Excerpted from Elegy for a Broken Machine by Patrick Phillips All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.