Poetry Blurb Cluster Fuck
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
"Like the decadent 19th C. poet of Huysman’s d’Abord (Au Rebours) but in a
21st century vital and female way Anne rolls out technology, fantasy,
wit, nature, passion, and luscious fields of sorted, and unsorted vague
(in a good way!) and rapturous information for our temporary perusal and
then with her magic stylus she flicks it away."--Eileen Myles
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
"Daze is days (the daily everywhere one reads every Daily) and confusion
(the Daily Bugle–or is it Bungle?–of constant shock). “And so the
parable grows an extra set of limbs to keep track of the/ ‘foliating of
experience.’” Cooperman observes that “Today nothing’s ever Euclidean.”
Which is to say there is no point to pass through except the
obvious: “I mean to say we die. He dies.” The poet addresses the Daze of
the daily and how we are “confused with the multiplicity of our lives,
or/how we are always.” His poems contain the philosophical and the
plain-spoken, the scientific and the ripeness of 19th century diction,
while at all times maintaining a healthy skepticism about language’s
capacity to bring us here (or hear), where we have been wandering around
lost for many years. Cooperman’s poems tell us that all may not be
lost, there may in fact be a home, even if we never get to open its
door."--John Yau
“The paradox of self-knowledge (how can the the perceiver—a
subject—become the perceived—an object—without becoming something other
than itself?) seems to mirror the paradox of time (what can we say of
the present instant before it is already past?). The self, as well as
time, is a ‘stranger to the direct gaze,’ as Martin Corless-Smith puts
it in his mesmerizing new volume. Here, Romantic discourses on the soul
are playfully and obliquely reconstituted via intertextual strategies
worthy of Borges and Jabès. In a work crossed by alternate selves and
alternate literary histories, Corless-Smith brilliantly evokes the
mystery and melancholia of being in time.”—Andrew Joron
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