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Stumbling Blocks: Roman Poems

Autor Karl Kirchwey
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 oct 2017
Through six earlier books Karl Kirchwey has rewarded readers with poems of great musicality, visual richness, and historical resonance. Stumbling Blocks: Roman Poems represents a culmination of his “formal mastery”—an honor often too loosely bestowed in contemporary American poetry, but one Kirchwey thoroughly earns.

As in his 1998 New York Times Notable Book The Engrafted Word, the city of Rome becomes a lens through which to understand the contemporary human experience and the upheavals of human loss. Stumbling Blocks takes as its starting point the shattered ancient Roman ruins described in Renaissance poet Joachim du Bellay's celebrated sonnet—a landscape of death feeding upon itself and restored to life in the imagination of each successive generation to salvage its own narratives.

Kirchwey builds new arches and mythological intersections in exquisite poems that take long walks in the Eternal City, through landscapes far away and deep within. This gorgeous collection takes us back in time and brings us forward through our Old and New Worlds, revealing through the religion of art both beauty and atrocity.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780810136274
ISBN-10: 0810136279
Pagini: 104
Dimensiuni: 156 x 216 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Northwestern University Press
Colecția Triquarterly

Notă biografică

KARL KIRCHWEY is the author of six previous collections of poetry: A Wandering Island; Those I Guard; The Engrafted Word; At the Palace of Jove; The Happiness of This World: Poetry and Prose; and Mount Lebanon. His essays and reviews have been widely published. He has also written a verse play based on the Alcestis of Euripides and a translation of Paul Verlaine, Poems under Saturn. From 2010 to 2013 he served as Andrew Heiskell Arts Director at the American Academy in Rome.

Cuprins

CONTENTS
 
Acknowledgments                                                                              6                     
 
A Fatal Hand (Joachim Du Bellay)                                                    8                                                                                               
I.
Leaving                                                                                               10
Airbus                                                                                                 11
PATER * FILIO * FECIT                                                                 13       
Body and Mask                                                                                  14
On the Janiculum, January 7, 2012                                                     15                                                                                                                   
II.
Roma 8F 9260                                                                                     17       
Tiber Island                                                                                         19
Janiculum Staircase                                                                             20       
 
III.
North Frieze Block XLVIII, Figures 118-20                                     22                   
The Stones at the Circus Maximus                                                     23
A Pair of Fountains
  1. Ask a Question25
  2. Starry Crown26
Stumbling Blocks: For Pius XII                                                         27
 
IV.
Troia                                                                                                    30
Stromboli                                                                                            31
Aeaea                                                                                                  32
Argos                                                                                                  33
 
V.
A Letter From Istanbul                                                                       35
 
VI.
Santa Cecilia                                                                                       42
Chiaraviglio                                                                                         43
A Roman Garden                                                                                45
 
VII.
Santa Maria in Trastevere                                                                   47
Two Farewells
            1. A Narcissus                                                                         48
            2. Villa Aurora                                                                        50
 
 
 
 
VIII.
Gentle Joyous God                                                                             53
Reading Apuleius                                                                               54
Pentecost                                                                                             55
 
IX.
Fiumicino, Morning                                                                            57
Ostia Antica                                                                                        58
A Return                                                                                             59
Roma città aperta                                                                                60
                                               
 
Notes                                                                                                   61
About the Author                                                                               63
 

Recenzii

"As with the poetry of Anthony Hecht, the poetry of Karl Kirchwey can startle you with emotional rawness amid its formal virtuosity." —The Hudson Review
 
“I think of Kirchwey as one of the true formal masters of American poetry, brilliant and supple in his craftsmanship in the tradition of Richard Wilbur, Anthony Hecht, and James Merrill. This is a magical volume of poems that asks us to consider what the poet calls ‘stumbling blocks,’ those many physical, temporal, and spiritual interruptions to our passage through a landscape and a life.” —David St. John, author of The Last Troubadour: New and Selected Poems​

“Karl Kirchwey reinvigorates the beauty of Rome for readers of poetry. Seeing with his clear eyes, we survey the Mediterranean’s varied history through deeply personal poems crafted with unassuming virtuosity.” —Michael Putnam, author of The Poetry of the Aeneid and Virgil's Pastoral Art

“Reading Karl Kirchwey's new book, one comes across the line in a poem entitled “Argos”: Every morning in the park of broken statues/a group of dog-watchers gather.  It is a seemingly casual observation, but holds modestly within itself many of the elements of these marvelous poems. Here, in this poem and many others, topography is fluid; time blurs under the force majeure of the poet's erudition, and the lucky adventurer is ensorcelled by the passing characters and circumstances that readily succumb to Kirchwey's attentions. Throughout this short collection, the author maintains a languid, generous presence. He is a master of his craft, and a reliable guide through the shadows of Rome and beyond. In Stumbling Blocks, Kirchwey is writing at the peak of his powers, which are considerable.” —Daniel Lawless, Founder and Editor of PLUME: A Journal of Contemporary Poetry

“The wonderful eloquence of these poems testifies to the traffic between ancient and new. The speaker is a witness, a visitor, a participant in the life of the great city of Rome. But there is far more. Above all, these are poems of a continuous, crafted subtlety,voicing in each poem the way the fragile present moment not only reveals the past but rescues it. This is a book that will give endless pleasure and illumination to the traveler in every poet, and the poet in every traveler.” –Eavan Boland, author of Woman Without a Country
 

"In our literary—or should I say spiritual? —world there are many who are obsessed with rebellion, with change, with wild laughter or sneaky irony. Karl Kirchwey is not like that. Stumbling Blocks is a book of piety, of admiration. What I like most here is the attention given to detail. To admire is one thing, to be precise—another. This book is admirably precise." —Adam Zagajewski, author of Canvas and World Without End: New and Selected Poems

Descriere

Stumbling Blocks is the seventh collection of poems by award-winning poet Karl Kirchwey, author of A Wandering Island and The Engrafted Word. Inspired by the ruins of Rome, Kirchwey builds new arches and mythological intersections in exquisite poems that take long walks through the Eternal City.