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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
excellent,
By
This review is from: To Repel Ghosts (Hardcover)
This book is a powerful rumination on Basquiat's life and themes. The poetry is consistantly alive and amazingly free of flab for a book of over 300 pages.Young takes the difficult task of responding to visual art in words and succeeds admirably. The selection of Basquiat as the subject is a suprisingly good one that allows Young to draw on the words and themes important to Basquiat. Young's use of Basquiat's painted slogans ties the experience of reading the book to the experience of viewing the paintings in an unmediated way. Basquiat's esoteric painted slogans work well in Young's clear accessible poems. Basquiat's touchstones of boxing and jazz allow for detours that hint back to Basquiat's life and art. The long poem on the boxer Jack Johnson is particularly good.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
rich and rewarding,
By A Customer
This review is from: To Repel Ghosts (Hardcover)
I'm mystified by some of these negative comments, which all seem to be either about some meta-conversation about the book (was Basquiat exploited? sure, but not by Kevin Young!) or its author (how the hell does anyone here know how poor or rich he was growing up?). Those who have actually read the book know how thoughtful, gorgous and rich it is; those who have not yet ought to, especially before writing barely-literate rants against it.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
To repel stupid reviews,
By Amy Sweiz (Maine) - See all my reviews
This review is from: To Repel Ghosts (Hardcover)
Do Not Believe The Previous Reviewer. Of course this book is words, it's a book! Young, whose first book Most Way Home was impressive if uneven, has taken quite a leap forward in his poetic life. Basquiat morphs into something other than his paintings, he becomes Young's poems, he becomes a monster and a genius, he becomes something close to mythic. This is not a picture book, you can't read poetry expecting to see images of the dead man's paintings, if you only want to read a description go and get a gallery catalogue! Instead, here, immerse yourself in Kevin Young, a poet who imagines America through the prism of a single, talented young man. A masterful work (that I was lucky enough to see just before its publication, lucky me!). Cheers.
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