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The Lyrics: Poems
 
 
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The Lyrics: Poems [Paperback]

Fanny Howe (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

June 26, 2007
Who was that stranger beside me?
Please forgive me for insisting
It must have been a dream.
No one could survive such happiness.

                           --from "[Untitled]"

The Lyrics records the days of one seeking knowledge through movement and contingent images--a monastery, a motel, an Irish coastal river--all the while conscious of political and class warfare, of being American, of the need to know the difference (if there is one) between good and evil. Each poem is a lament formed in a place of rest, asking: Can we get beyond this and still be? The Lyrics is the newest work of an intense and vital poet.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In her latest collection, the prolific Howe continues her career-long pursuit of moral clarity and spiritual insight: What is a poet but a person/ Who lives on the ground/ Who laughs and listens// Without pretension of knowing/ Anything, driven by the lyric's/ Quest for rest that never/ (God willing) will be found? Diaristic and plainspoken, these seven sequences are welcoming and immediately likable, especially The Days, which finds Howe at her most apothegmatic (A seed can be stamped on/ And still want to live) and declamatory (This is such an old story, listen./ The poor are hard-working/ And the rich get more through talking). Firm-voiced passages like these provide refreshing disruption from occasional flatness, a hazard due in large part to Howe's frequent preference here for relatively brief, simple sentences, most of which avoid syntactic complication and many of which are broken into short, lilting, end-stopped lines. But if this simplicity of structure grows fatiguing, it also gives the poems a humble, balladlike character well-suited to Howe's down-to-earth metaphysics: So pray to the toilet, flush./ Pray to the floor, stay clean./...To the cow and the hen, thank you/ For all you have given/ To us workers of the world. (July)
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Review

Praise for On the Ground:

"This is a book that teaches us to be ecstatic about poetry; in it we hear the frayed and difficult passages of our thought and place as humans, our restive worry and our longing for peaceful cohabitation with all others. On the Ground is an essential book for our times." --Judges' Citation, Griffin International Poetry Prize Finalist

Product Details

  • Paperback: 80 pages
  • Publisher: Graywolf Press; First Edition edition (June 26, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1555974724
  • ISBN-13: 978-1555974725
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.8 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #649,107 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 the terrain of human experience, July 21, 2007
This review is from: The Lyrics: Poems (Paperback)
Fanny Howe's poetry collection, The Lyrics, includes poems that thrive on the lyric poem's conventions; the poems include both the personal world of the speaker, as well as the universal world. Each poem is also a lyric by itself; each lyric comprises The Lyrics spoken about in the title. It is not uncommon for Howe to include first person plurals; the result is a collection that addresses the emotional journey of not just its speakers, but the people around the speakers.

If ever there was a poem serving as an atlas or guide for this collection's reader, it is the poem "28." from the first section of the book, "The Days." This poem represents the journey that the reader, speaker(s) and poet are taking. Howe writes:

A day is a freely given poem; it can be short or long.
Contradiction, coincidence.

An emotional experience.
Perseverance through hell.

A series of events you must not forget.
Twelve sunsets, twenty nine dawns, all in one.

An epiphany.
How long your hopes last

Until the next poem.

This poem explains both the terrain of the poem's conception and focus, as well as the terrain of human experience. The poems in this collection deal with "contradiction" and "coincidence" and how each "epiphany" leads to another "series of events." The poems are short, but together they make one large poem. These "lyrics" are subtitled with numbers, as each forms the bulk of a larger poem. As the aforementioned poem is contained under "The Days," it is both its own poem, as well as a piece of a larger poem. The lyrical poem's "emotional experience" is what drives the collection's pieces, but, oftentimes, the poems circle around subject matter just as humans see the world.

Gender has a prominent place in Howe's book. If this collection is about the journeys we take and the accompanying emotions, then gender is a logical issue to include; afterall, Howe is not only a poet, but also a female poet. In poems such as "5." - in the section titled, "Home" - power and equality are spoken about in the situation Howe presents. She writes about "the long pause" when "men and women/struggle with equal strength" and how, eventually, the man will "drag me through the streets" and how he "dropped me and the children at a station/Like statues he had cut, baked and broken." Here, gender is spoken about explicitly. The male figure uses and abuses, and the female speaks as if beyond the grave of how "I must have been insane." Here, Howe demonstrates the ways in which men and women have interacted, and how violent a traditional space, such as "home," can be.

Patriarchal culture is also discussed in terms of war. In her poem, "6." - in the section titled "School" - she writes how "humans and horses together" are "one thing." Here, the culture is brought to an animalistic level; horses and humans, "pricks/in their pants.../draw up plans/for the continuing slaughter." Here, the patriarchial violence is highlighted to draw attention to the culture's violence. For this poem to exist in the "School" section insinuates the way in which violence and patriarchal culture are things that are learned.

The poems in Howe's collection explore the world in which people live and the elements that affect each collective and individual experience. The poems contain inversions, repetition and an elliptical take on subjects such as religion, education, nature and gender. The world is broken into pieces, but the whole is created through each "lyric."
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First Sentence:
Where, if I go far enough, will I find a sacred place? Read the first page
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