Review by Booklist Review
In this sprawling, metapoetic, satiric work, writer, translator, and novelist Ruby (The Zero and the One, 2017) attempts to recount, break down, and synthesize into lyrics the entire history of Western poetry. To begin, Ruby admits that his book-length poem deprioritizes familiar features of poetry, such as "troping, image formation, self-expression," in favor of features usually attributed to prose, such as "rhetoric, argumentation, historicization." The result is a verse essay in the tradition of Horace's "Ars Poetica" and Wallace Stevens' "Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction." In alternating pages of text and subtext, Ruby executes this ambitious and mischievous undertaking in lines that are playfully verbose ("an empty stomach / Curdles Panegyric into Phillippic") and surprisingly profound ("poetry and fire / are the first media,") if potentially estranging in their erudition. But perhaps the greatest risk in treating poetry like a "media technology," as a means of primarily "disseminating and storing information," is the sacrifice of the more simply delectable lyrical delights hewn of human heart and spirit in favor of a hyperactive, effervescent intellect.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Literary critic Ruby (The Zero and the One) delivers a dazzling and ambitious "verse essay" tracing the history of poetry from Homer through the present. He begins with early Greek poetry performances, where audiences didn't seek to interpret the poet's words so much as "judge the skill with which they are sung." In medieval times, poetry was usually composed by court troubadours and performed by jongleurs (itinerant entertainers), Ruby explains, discussing how troubadours developed increasingly complicated rhyme schemes to make it difficult for "unscrupulous" jongleurs to introduce their own changes. Elsewhere, Ruby describes how poets attempted more sophisticated literary techniques after the 15th-century invention of the printing press, which enabled readers to spend more time parsing texts; how modernists wrote thematically dense verse in hopes of inspiring enough scholarly exegesis to keep their names alive after their deaths; and how a contemporary overabundance of poets makes it appear that most poems are read by few and culturally irrelevant. Ruby's effortless synthesis of artistic, cultural, and technological developments makes him an excellent historical guide, and the verse essay format--consciously modeled on the argumentative poetry of Parmenides and Alexander Pope, among others--proves a novel reading experience. This literary history stands in a class all its own. (Nov.)
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