Hold everything Poems

Dobby Gibson, 1970-

Book - 2024

"In his latest collection, Dobby Gibson explores the strangeness of the everyday with fresh urgency, inviting us to reawaken and reclaim our fuller selves. Hold Everything moves at the speed of breaking news as it makes a plea for grace in a world running short on mercy. Its epistolary poems put us in correspondence with Edo-period poets and 1980s hair-metal gods, artificial intelligence and hotel soaps. Gibson's poems remain on alert, demonstrating the many ways a deeper attention to the marvels and horrors of the contemporary world can form a kind of civil disobedience. Hold Everything gathers up the harbingers of our turbulent world as it reaches for hope and evinces wonder"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
poetry
Poetry
Poésie
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Graywolf Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Dobby Gibson, 1970- (author)
Physical Description
77 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781644453094
  • Room Tone
  • Boingo Hotspot
  • This Is a Test of the Federal Emergency Management Agency Wireless Warning System
  • Polaroid
  • Stand Tall
  • Poem Written onto the Back of a Program During My Daughter's Violin Recital
  • Dean's Mask
  • Poem for David Lee Roth
  • The Little Prince
  • Shadow Pulpit
  • Night Shift
  • Poem for Ed Bok Lee
  • Poem with 14 Openings
  • First Avenue
  • Planet Fitness
  • Prattle
  • Sludge
  • Poem for My Ginkgo Tree
  • Small Craft Talk
  • This Just In
  • Hold Everything
  • The Afterlife Is Our Most Persistent Rumor
  • My Life
  • Kingdom of Smoke
  • How Roses Get Their Names
  • Poem for Hotel Soaps
  • How to Become a Poet
  • Self-Portrait in a Bathroom Mirror
  • Getting It Right
  • After Reading Kobayashi Issa's The Spring of My Life on My 49th Birthday
  • Corpse Pose
  • The Endless Year
  • After Mehretu
  • Poem for Lilacs
  • Poem Never to Be Read Aloud
  • Poem for Zinnias
  • Starting Again
  • Dream of Swimming, the Water's Ready
  • Flutter Kick
  • Gown
  • Say When
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Gibson's deeply enjoyable latest (after Little Glass Planet) marvels at small acts of attention. Moving freely among subjects including technology, politics, the natural world, and memory, Gibson animates his poems with epiphanies both large and small, all made possible by his fine-tuned observation and humor. For example, in a poem that cleverly articulates the paradoxical necessity of continuous human input in the development of artificial intelligence, Gibson muses, "The more questions/ I ask the great machine,/ the more human/ it becomes. Hello, machine,/ what are you making/ of your inner life?" The poems use direct address to great effect, startling the reader into a deeper sense of the fantastic within the seemingly mundane: "Life, I love you! Fireworks, fossil record,/ Twizzlers, tonsillectomy, it mumbles back." In the lengthy title poem, Gibson's attentiveness gathers steam, collecting a far-ranging assortment of observations to reframe reality in unique ways: "The morning is/ not yet its own. Biographies share the same ending./ I glance at the sun the way a thief looks at his fingers." This perceptive and surprising collection shines. (Oct.)

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