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On the Edge: Collected Long Poems
 
 
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On the Edge: Collected Long Poems [Hardcover]

Kenneth Koch (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

October 23, 2007
On the Edge is a collection of the six longer masterpieces by one of the most beloved and accomplished poets of our time.

Full of exclamation and exaggeration but also graced with dry wit and comic sophistication, these poems contain some of Kenneth Koch’s most original work. When the Sun Tries to Go On is a young man’s radical song of himself and his freshly discovered and expanding universe. Ko, or A Season on Earth is an epic invention filled with such memorably powerful characters as a rookie baseball star whose pitches knock down grandstands, and Joseph Dah, whose poems transform him into whatever he writes about. In The Duplications Koch’s inventions expand into Ovidian twists as Commander Papend builds a life-sized replica of Venice in Peru and a chemist discovers a way to make young women out of the soil of Finland. In the elegiac Seasons on Earth and in two meditative autobiographical sequences, Impressions of Africa and On the Edge, Koch’s protean expressions of emotion make obvious his genius for evoking the mystery and excitement of the fact of existence and the passage of time.

Distinctly and irrepressibly Koch throughout, these works heighten our appreciation of his achievement. On the Edge is the perfect companion volume to the critically acclaimed Collected Poems of Kenneth Koch, about which John Ashbery, in Publishers Weekly, said, “The products of a lifetime are on display in this awe-inspiring banquet of a book.”

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

One doesn't go to Koch to experience the opening of the poet's mind to the world (Ashbery's stated desire), but for urbane, often vaudevillian, entertainments. This volume—a companion to 2005's Collected Poems (also Knopf), which gathers all of Koch's shorter poetry—shows Koch stretching out in his six extended works. The early Dada epic When the Sun Tries to Go On is a 60-plus page list of syntactical detritus, punctuated by bizarre apostrophes: O tuxedo/ May conceited lobster! Ko, or a Season on Earth is Koch's masterpiece, a mock epic in Byronic stanzas about a Japanese baseball player who hits it big, punctuated this time by impossible synchronicities: Meanwhile the entire continent of Asia/ Was moving sideways unpredictably/.../ Hawaii, meanwhile, feeling simply great/ Was speeding toward acceptance as a state. Impressions of Africa shows Koch opening up a more personal space: the poem is a journal of his long journey to Africa. At last, there is a psychological element (of sorts), as Koch finds himself silenced: I look at nothing for a while. This book may change some opinions on Koch; readers may ask whether his prodigious formal inventiveness thrives given more room, or if the poems remain surface-oriented, like a body of wate that never moves but looks lively wherever you are watching. (Oct.)
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Review

“No American poet over the last half-century wrote with as much antic and anarchic gusto as Kenneth Koch: In the grand tradition of fast-talking funnymen from Aristophanes to Groucho, his boisterous brand of comedy was a natural byproduct of his exuberant audacity. Who says serious poetry has to be solemn?” —The Boston Globe


From the Trade Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1 edition (October 23, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0307262847
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307262844
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1.3 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,090,444 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars from RCF Vol. XXVIII, #1, September 12, 2010
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Called the "headmaster and ringmaster" of the New York School by his friend John Ashbery, Kenneth Koch's On the Edge: Collected Long Poems follows on the heals of the 2005 release of The Collected Poems of Kenneth Koch and The Collected Fiction of Kenneth Koch, which along with a few volumes of plays, some anthologies, and several successful books on the teaching of poetry, rounds out the oeuvre of this important, irreverent, innovative, madcap genius of a poet. Although widely read and appreciated, Koch never quite achieved the critical acclaim and immense popularity of his closest New York School compadres, a conundrum well illustrated by the work in this volume; not because it is lacking anything, but rather because its excesses--its exuberant embrace of "[t]he excitement/ [a]nd the illusion of living at the beginning of thought"--are wholly outside of the waxing and waning modes of popular verse in both conservative and experimental circles. The first of the six poems reprinted here, "When the Sun Tries to Go On," is Koch at his zaniest; written in the early 1950s, its 2,400 lines of pseudo-sense brought the spirit of Dada into American poetry and prefigured some of the innovative techniques often attributed to Language writing. It is also the volume's most polarizing work, praised by the avant-garde and panned by just about everyone else. It is followed by two epic poems, "Ko, or A Season on Earth" and "The Duplications," which were written in the Italian form of ottava rima. Using rhyme and meter in a contemporary epic poem would be enough to guarantee a relegation to the sidelines of popularity; throw in a wholly comedic narrative about a Japanese baseball player with an explosive pitch, as Koch did, and you're pretty much out of the game for good. These are wonderful poems, made all the more fresh because they lack an attendant army of imitators taking up their concerns. The last three poems included here, "Impressions of Africa," "On the Edge," and "Seasons on Earth," show Koch's gradual movement from a poetry "ecstatically in the present tense" toward the often nostalgically tinged pathos of much of his later work.
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