Blizzard

Henri Cole

Book - 2020

"A powerful new collection of poems by the award-winning poet"--

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Henri Cole (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
64 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780374114381
  • Machine generated contents note: I
  • Face of the Bee
  • On Peeling Potatoes
  • Black Mushrooms
  • Lingonberry Jam
  • To a Snail
  • To a Bat
  • Jelly
  • To the Oversoul
  • The Party Tent
  • At the Grave of Robert Lowell
  • Recycling
  • Departure
  • Paris Is My Seroquel
  • Human Highway
  • II
  • Doves
  • Goya
  • Weeping Cherry
  • Migrants Devouring the Flesh of a Dead Horse
  • To a Root in Air
  • (Re)creation
  • Super Bloom
  • Gross National Unhappiness
  • Unstable Air
  • Mud or Flesh
  • Haiku
  • The Horsemen
  • Pheasant
  • Land of Never-Ending Holes
  • III
  • On Pride
  • Red Dawn
  • Elevation
  • Keep Me
  • Epivir, d4T, Crixivan
  • Ginger and Sorrow
  • Rice Pudding
  • Blizzard
  • Dandelions (III)
  • On Friendship
  • Corpse Pose
  • Man and Kitten
  • Kayaking on the Charles
  • Gay Bingo at a Pasadena Animal Shelter.
Review by Library Journal Review

In Rome Prize winner Cole's tenth book (after Nothing To Declare), the best poems reach out to nearby objects as if the poet were using his eyes like a camera noticing the particulars of his environs while magically capturing the spirit that enlivens them. The epigraph suggests the spiritual undertones of the collection: "NOW DO U UNDERSTAND WHAT HEAVEN IS/ IT IS THE SURROUND OF THE LIVING." With the line "memory of feeling is not feeling," the title poem raises the notion of aloneness that permeates the entire collection. Generally, Cole takes two paths here. On one, he employs nature as a way to understand himself. On the other, he projects aspects of himself on to objects in nature. On both paths, these mostly sonnetlike poems use details to go in search of warmth--as found in relationships between people and between people and the natural world. Take one of Cole's strongest poems, "Departure," which alludes to Robert Frost's poem, "Two Look at Two," as it concerns a narrator who watches two deer who watch him. While Frost's poem contains two people, Cole's poem has one somewhat dispirited narrator. Cole ends not with the certainty of earth's love (as in Frost) but with an injunction: "If tenderness approaches, run to it." VERDICT For large poetry collections.--C. Diane Scharper, Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD

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