Editorial Graywolf Press
Fecha de edición agosto 2012 · Edición nº 1
Idioma inglés
EAN 9781555976200
88 páginas
Libro
encuadernado en tapa blanda
The second collection by Catherine Barnett, whose poems are scrupulously restrained and beautifully made (Edward Hirsch, The Washington Post)
Everyone asks us what we're afraid of
but children aren't supposed to say.
We could put loneliness on the list.
We could put the list on the list, its infinity.
We could put infinity down.
--from Fields of No One to Ask
In Catherine Barnett's The Game of Boxes, love stutters its way in and out of both family and erotic bonds. Whittled down to song and fragments of story, these poems teeter at the edge of dread. A gang of unchaperoned children, grappling with blame and forgiveness, speak with tenderness and disdain about the mothers and the fathers, absent figures they seek in the faces of clouds and in the cars that pass by. Other poems investigate the force of maternal love and its at-times misguided ferocities. The final poem, a long sequence of nocturnes, eschews almost everything but the ghostly erotic. These are bodies at the edge of experience, watchful and defamiliarized.
Catherine Barnett is the author of a previous poetry book, Into Perfect Spheres Such Holes Are Pierced. She has received a Whiting Writer's Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship. She lives in New York City.
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