The asking New and selected poems

Jane Hirshfield, 1953-

Book - 2023

"The Asking opens with new and urgent poems by Jane Hirshfield, in which she faces again the contradictions that have shaped her work: "Some take/ in witnessed suffering, pleasure," she writes. "Some make, of witnessed suffering, beauty." The volume then returns to the beginning, carrying us from her earliest volumes (including Of Gravity and Angels; Given Sugar, Given Salt; and After), up through the important recent work (Come, Thief; The Beauty; Ledger). We find poems of the smallest ant and the vastness of time, of hunger and bounty, of science and war and love in its myriad forms. Whether it is Hirshfield's insistence on the lessons of the natural world-"The lake scarlets / the same instant as the map...le. / Let others try to say this is not passion"-or her facing squarely the depredations of climate and the harm to fellow human beings by our own hands; whether she is assessing what language does for us ("Words are loyal. / Whatever they name they take the side of") or interrogating poetry itself as a vibrant, living medium through which her own debt to creation's splendors must be paid, this poet sets our shared truths in black ink. The Asking, in poems of delicacy and ringing clarity, demands our attention to beauty and injustice equally, enlarging our awareness of breakage as well as the possibility for repair"--

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Subjects
Genres
poetry
Poetry
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Jane Hirshfield, 1953- (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi book." -- title page verso.
Includes index.
Physical Description
xviii, 343 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593535950
9781524712280
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Hirshfield's mindfully measured poems, inquiries into the mysteries and fundamentals of being alive, of being human, are essential works. Pared down in structure, her lyrics are lushly observed and deeply questioning as well as nimble, imaginative, witty, and poignant. Hirshfield discerns revelations within a simple room and in encounters with other species, sunshine, starlight, and memories as she balances loss and joy. Her profound attunement to life's interconnectivity inspires her incisive dismay over our roughshod decimation of the great living web that sustains us. Hirshfield's exquisitely formed, intricate reckonings incandesce in this necessary collection of selected poems from her nine previous books of poetry, from Alaya (1982) to Ledger (2020), and an opening set of 33 powerful new poems. As with all her work, these lyrics sync our consciousness to the rhythm of breath and the music of words ringing with freshly mined implications, as in "Manifest," a stunning vision of spinning, sun-circling Earth. Hirshfield calls our attention to life's continual exchange from dark to light, silence to sound, unknowing to realization, sunlight to fruit, grain to bread, love to touch, death to more love. She calls out our inability "To recognize fully the Amazon burning, / the Arctic burning," then tells us: "don't despair of this falling world, not yet didn't it give you the asking".

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

Spanning from 1971 to 2023, this outstanding chronological selection begins with new, uncollected work and ends with a portion from "Ledger," published in 2020. A longtime practitioner of California Zen Buddhism who approaches poetry with the discipline of daily prayer, Hirshfield directs her poems at the natural world while examining problems of the self: "To be personal is easy:.../ I wanted to be mountainal, wateral, wrenal." Poems about love are present throughout the author's oeuvre. Still, Hirshfield wrestles with contradiction and despair; the lines "everything is still possible" and "everything now is finished" appear in the same poem. She is particularly skilled at writing short verses hinged on surprise; "Two Kerosene Lanterns," for instance, wittily casts a mishap from a cat's point of view. Doors and windows are frequent metaphors, as in "Three Times My Life Has Opened": "There is a door. It opens. Then it is closed. But a slip of light/ stays, like a scrap of unreadable paper left on the floor,/ or the one red leaf the snow releases in March." Longer poems take on difficult topics, including today's political and environmental crises. These muscular yet lyrical poems offer necessary reminders of joy in a world marked by suffering. (Sept.)

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