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The Cradle Place: Poems [Hardcover]

Thomas Lux (Author)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 11, 2004
The Cradle Place is the new collection from Thomas Lux, a self-described "recovering surrealist" and winner of the Kingsley Tufts Award.
These fifty-two poems bring to full life the "refreshing iconoclasms" Rita Dove so admired in Lux's earlier work. His voice is plainspoken but moody, humorous and edgy, and ever surprising.
These are philosophical poems that ask questions about language and intention, about the sometimes untidy connections between the human and natural worlds. In the poem "Terminal Lake," Lux undermines notions of benign nature, finding dark currents beneath the surface: "it's a huge black coin, / it's as if the real lake is drained / and this lake is the drain: gaping, language- / less, suck- and sinkhole." In the ominous "Render, Render," the narrator asks us to consider a concentration of the essences of our lives: all that is physical, spiritual, remembered, and dreamed for, melded together to make the messy self we present to the world.
Lux's voice is intelligent without being bookish, urgent and unrelentingly evocative. He has long been a strong advocate for the relevance of poetry in American culture. The Los Angeles Times praises Lux for his "compelling rhythms, his biting irony, and his steady devotion to a craft that often seems thankless." As Sven Birkerts noted, "Lux may be one of the poets on whom the future of the genre depends."

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Witty, hard to classify and easy to enjoy, Lux alternates acid wit with off-kilter storytelling in this 10th collection of verse, the first since The Street of Clocks (2001) and only the second since a 1997 New & Selected. Lux has been known for his terse, magic-realist scene-setting (which some have compared to Charles Simic): these poems keep the odd situations but rev up the verbal music, with rapid, often lengthy lines and titles that simultaneously charm and disturbâ€""Debate Regarding the Permissibility of Eating Mermaids," "Can't Sleep the Clowns Will Eat Me," "The American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association" (this last turns out to be a poem about art). Lux tends to open poems with their most bizarre elements, then glide down into familiar sentiments, inviting our sympathy, denouncing his enemies, or making bleak jokes about disappointment and death: "What the maggots do/ they do for you." Standout poems often pivot on prominent factoids: "One out of eight deaths occurring in the home/ or on picnics/ is impalement related." Such arguably morbid (or chilling) themes balance out other, sweeter passages built on parents' experience raising children, or the more infantilizing aspects of everyday life: "Do nothing to further perplex the other perplexed./ We'll let you know when it's single file for lunch."
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Thomas Lux holds the Bourne Chair in Poetry and is the director of the McEver Visiting Writers Program at Georgia Institute of Technology. He has been awarded three NEA grants and the Kingsley Tufts Award and is a former Guggenheim Fellow. He lives in Atlanta.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 80 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; None edition (March 11, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618428305
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618428304
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,151,321 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
2.5 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Primordial milk, May 14, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Cradle Place: Poems (Hardcover)
Most of what I can say about *The Cradle Place* will sound too much like what I said about *Street of Clocks*, but it's still true: this is one good poet, and this is another good book. If you haven't read Lux before, go look at *The Street of Clocks* for my sprawling encomia on the Lux oeuvre. Specific and concrete of detail, distinctive and musical of voice, celebratory and humorous and really funny: all of the above still apply.

So how (I hear you cry) is *The Cradle Place* different? Well, I think I'm detecting an increasing trend toward what I'd call allegory if "allegory" weren't so unfashionable a term at the moment. "Professor of Ants", "Asafetida", "The American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association"-these have pretty clear more-than-metaphorical implications.

And I see, or imagine I see, a deepening dark streak, more of a "gletz", if you like: that "breathless, cell-sized cell/where two inmates are locked/and each has a knife." Of course, calling Lux's poems dark at this late date may sound funny, considering that the author was writing about leech farming seven or eight years back; but when my husband prised my head out of the book to ask how it was looking, my first-blush response was "these are not happy poems." In retrospect some of them seem more so--the final poem, which already made my day when it appeared in APR, is very lively, and it's good to think that out of the magma chambers the heart spews into the world we can make "a new republic of hope." But we are seeing, this time, a can of alphabet soup full of "little noodle swastikas" (if I'd been planning to ever eat alphabet soup again, I wouldn't be now.) The birds here are nailed to trees in museums, waiting to be picked off by mummified boys with pellet guns. The poet acknowledges that if we value our necks, there are times when we'll "shut the f--- up", that our bones are owned by something else, and that he wants to "whack-smack" the One Afraid to Be Seen. And call me a sentimental putz, but I hate it when even my favorite authors behead bees, ironically or no, and the Dobyns-esque worldview that might see the bee as having no existence outside of perception and allegory and words doesn't exactly warm the cockles of my hard but animistic heart. So, yeah, there are indeed "Scorpions Everywhere" here. One of the epigraphs is Roethke's cry for "the old rage, the lash of primordial milk", and I expect it's here.

Still, I think you, gentle Reader, should read the book. After all, there are a whole lot of scorpions out there (albeit probably not masquerading as squirrels), and it doesn't make the world any worse to look at them, and plant even on them "as many kisses as the world will bear."

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 4-star review for a 5-star poet, August 20, 2006
I am a big fan of Thomas Lux's work--when his work is sharp, he thrusts you immediately into a new quantum universe which is sometimes familiar, or sometimes not. Either way, it quickly establishes its own rules and explores those rules to some human conclusion. Poems of his like "Wife Hits Moose" or "Baby, Still Crying, Swallowed by A Snake" quickly explore the new territory they have established to finally make some point about faith or hopelessness.

Unfortunately, the poems that I just named are not ones that appear in this particular collection. I am always glad to see a new collection by Lux, for I know that the situations of his poems are going to continually surprise me, whether they are horses who die mid-gallop or mummies about to be ground into powder for other uses. But a few poems in here fail to reach those human conclusions that really mark Lux's best work. At one point, we find the speaker of a poem chastising himself for the kind of historical obsession Lux himself has shown in his poems, but this conclusion is unsatisfying and seems almost the work of a novice, which Lux is not.

A marvellous poem in this collection is "To Help the Monkey Cross the River," which in the end produces a hypothetical choice as wise and as wide as implication as Ginger or MaryAnn?, or Steak or Shrimp? This poem is a fine example of the pure genius of Lux, but these examples are more scant in this book.

I still look forward to the next Lux collection but am not fully satisfied with this particular production.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars some good work, not his best, July 28, 2004
By 
Master of (sitting here) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cradle Place: Poems (Hardcover)
I bought this book at full price in a chain bookstore because I think Lux should get all the recognition coming to him. His selected poetry is masterful, The Street of Clocks astounding, and there are some damn fine poems in here, but in all I don't think this work snaps-to like they did in other collections. Boatloads of mummies, and even a self-chastisement about his neurotic history probing, but in all he doesn't quite pull off what he did in poems like The Man Into Whose Yard and others. Lux is quite a worker, though, and I will snatch up his next collection with unrelenting ardor.
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