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Capacity: Poems [Hardcover]

James McMichael (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 21, 2006
Capacity, the extraordinary new collection from the award-winning poet James McMichael, deliberates an earth that supplies what people need to live. Ocean, land, animate bodies, shelter, thoughts, feelings, talk, sex--each is addressed at the pace of someone dense with wonder's resistance to take for granted even the smallest or most obvious parts of existence.
James McMichael is the author of five books of poetry, most recently The World at Large: New and Selected Poems, 1971-1996. Among his awards are a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Whiting Writers' Award, and the Shelley Memorial Prize.
A National Book Award Finalist
 
A book of 1930s photographs makes an overture. Then, up from the center of the earth, Capacity surfaces on the North Atlantic. It is pulled southeasterly toward the place its language comes from, so dense with wonder at what it meets along the way that it takes nothing for granted. Obsessed with the small, these poems address one by one the things that people need to live. Land, water, sky, food, shelter, thought, talk, sex, and generation: Any person is capacitated in the measure that these things are there as his or her world. Capacity supposes that how this world goes is worthy of being sung.
"McMichael is the 13-year cicada of poetry. With roughly the same regularity he surfaces, sheds his old skin and delivers a song that's entirely his own. Since 1980, his sole contributions to the genre (excluding a 'new and selected') have been three book-length poems, each strikingly different from the others and from anything else on the market. In Capacity, he has exchanged the long lines and explicit autobiography of the previous two for dispassion, elision and lines as short as a syllable. What hasn't changed is his commitment to close scrutiny . . . Everything, from immigration patterns to heartsickness, is described in the same objective, almost clinical tone—a strange and wonderful choice, lending disproportionate power to the subtlest gestures."—Eric McHenry, The New York Times Book Review
 
"McMichael's calm, smart verse essays and poetic narratives attracted critical acclaim, if never a broad following, during the 1980s; his sixth book pursues its intellectual ambition with renewed attention and verve, and comprises just seven poems. The lead poem, 'The British Countryside in Pictures,' provides a frame for the whole, placing the story of Britain's evacuee children (sent from cities to farmland during the Blitz) within contexts from economic history and geology to the beginnings of one child's life. From details and antecedents within this story (perhaps, though McMichael does not specify, the story of his own family) derive the other topics here: the horrors of the Irish potato famine; reproductive science; how we make judgments; how we become ourselves amid the overlapping determinants of social class, locale, memory, biology. 'Capacity is both how/ much a thing holds and how/ much it can do,' McMichael explains in the title poem, and his work proves capacious in both respects."—Publishers Weekly
 

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

McMichael's calm, smart verse essays and poetic narratives attracted critical acclaim, if never a broad following, during the 1980s; his sixth book (the first since 1996's The World at Large: New and Selected) pursues its intellectual ambition with renewed attention and verve, and comprises just seven poems. The lead poem, "The British Countryside in Pictures," provides a frame for the whole, placing the story of Britain's evacuee children (sent from cities to farmland during the Blitz) within contexts from economic history and geology to the beginnings of one child's life. From details and antecedents within this story (perhaps, though McMichael does not specify, the story of his own family) derive the other topics here: the horrors of the Irish potato famine; reproductive science; how we make judgments; how we become ourselves amid the overlapping determinants of social class, locale, memory, biology. "Capacity is both how/ much a thing holds and how/ much it can do," McMichael explains in the title poem, and his work proves capacious in both respects. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

Praise for James McMichael:
 
"With brilliance and precision, James McMichael draws us into intimate exchanges . . . By attending so thoroughly to what is of the world, McMichael gives the underlying and unspeakable power of mystery its rightful place." --Killarney Clary
 
"Simply the best poetry I have read in years from an American poet . . . This is deeply mature and rewarding work and I am a better person and reader for having read it." --Gerald Early

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 88 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; First Edition edition (March 21, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0374118906
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374118907
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,511,715 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars beautiful, eloquent, May 6, 2007
By 
Amy Wilentz (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Capacity: Poems (Paperback)
this is a tensely wound poem of extraordinary trnasparency that seeks to understand real human experience while exploring ideas of truth, time and place. I respect it very much and also enjoyed it. It's a thrilling work.
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4 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Congealing Droplets Leaked by the Adrenals, October 23, 2006
By 
Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Capacity: Poems (Hardcover)
Prize winning author James McMichael returns with a book after many years of silence, spent teaching and administering a poetry MFA program at one of California's leading universities. CAPACITY has earned him the coveted poetry nomination from the National Book Awards, which has puzzled many poetry fans, considering the work here isn't his best. However I suppose we are grateful to have another book from a man whom many considered long on the shelf. In years to come perhaps we will look back on this volume and see in it a dramatic change in McMichael's somewhat ponderous manner? His main inspirations as a poet seem to be John Milton's PARADISE REGAINED and Robert Frost's MASQUE OF REASON (1945) and MASQUE OF MERCY (1947), so it is fitting that his new book opens with a lengthy meditation on a book of photographs called THE BRITISH COUNTRYSIDE IN PICTURES.

McMichael wants us all to think about how much of our visual memory is drawn from photography, and expressions like "Market Day" also ring a sort of sonic bell for people who might never even have visited the UK. Like Rosebud, this book of photos has a mysterious hold over the narrator of these seven linked poems, who sees himself hypnotized by these photos aa a child, newly fresh from "the mother's aperture" and on a Lacanian voyage towards self-hood, striving to reach past the protoplasm stage of the fetus, when all he did was "feed and make waste."

Thus experiencing the British countryside, even in pictures, is an important step for the boy. The cunning cover image cleverly puts this in perspective. Elsewhere McMichael waxes and wanes in wisdom. Sometimes he's right on, otherwise he's so pretentious you think he must be pulling your leg. The image of the mouth is genuinely stirring. Did you know the first thing a baby has is a mouth, then lips form round it. For the boy is always wanting something, that is his first need. But otherwise it's all blanket statements from an Ask Mr Wizard sort of talking head in a TV documentary: "Until given out later as what has been/ risen from,/ / origin has not happened."
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