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Tesserae: Memories & Suppositions
 
 
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Tesserae: Memories & Suppositions [Hardcover]

Denise Levertov (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 17, 1995

"A series of mini-memoirs bound together like a mosaic."—Publishers Weekly

Tesserae, the small individual pieces of glass or stone that make up a mosaic, is an apt title for this series of memoirs by Denise Levertov.

Rather than a completed autobiography, these collected memoirs are, for the author, fragments "composed from time to time between poems." Each of the twenty-seven pieces of Tesserae explores a memory vital to Levertov's life; each is complete in itself and set here chronologically. And, as in any good mosaic, every piece reflects light at different angles, giving this self-portrait its living complexity. Tesserae differs for the first time the unique memoirs or "a poet who may just be the finest writing in English today" (Kirkus Reviews).

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

"Moments of childhood lodge in one's memory sometimes for reasons?their beauty, drama, or comedy; others equally tenacious are unaccountable: why that instant rather than a million others?" So asks Levertov (The Jacob's Ladder) in these 27 brief, autobiographical prose pieces. Though much described is universal to childhood (secret places and societies, loss and fear, best friends and first loves), Levertov's memories are tinged with the exotic. Educated by her mother amid extensive world travel, she was often in the company of such celebrated thinkers, artists and writers as T.S. Eliot, Lawrence Olivier, Paul Robeson, Franz Werfel and Emlyn Williams, though she was unaware of their status at the time. As in her poetry, Levertov's descriptions and characterizations can be flawless; her ability to relate an incident is at once timeless and immediate, boundless and searingly personal. Outstanding examples include "Gypsies," "The Gardener" and "By the Seaside," each filled with frank observations of the folly and mysticism of youth, of chances and dreams lost, of seconds that altered fate; and "Cordova," capturing "a little task which a child's imagination transformed into an adventure." "These tesserae have no pretensions," Levertov notes. She is right?these lovely, lyrical remembrances are too true and spare ever to invite such criticism.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Tesserae are pieces of a mosaic, and these brief prose pieces?not quite prose poems, not quite essays?are autobiographical fragments that offer a context for Levertov's largely nonconfessional poetry. Epitaphs to the lost world of late childhood, they disclose the seemingly slight, often humorous minutiae that make up a formidable artistic sensibility. Levertov, who now lives in the United States, was raised among the bohemian elite in England by a nature-loving Welsh mother and a distinguished Anglican priest father from a scholarly Russian-Jewish family. Particularly amusing is a piece from a series entitled "Metting and Not Meeting Artists," in which the author's parents naively attempt to enlist a fashionable French painter to tutor their painter-daughter (their pilgrimage to the artist's studio interrupts his midday tryst). In spite of an irritating fortune-telling motif regarding the writer's predestination for "an extraordinary life," these are elegant, unpretentious pieces that evoke a poet's coming of age in London during World War II. Recommended.?Ellen Kaufman, Dewey Ballantine Law Lib., New York
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 148 pages
  • Publisher: New Directions; First Edition edition (April 17, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0811212920
  • ISBN-13: 978-0811212922
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,637,948 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pictures of the gone world., April 25, 2000
Tesserae is a collection of short prose works by renound poet/activist Denise Levertov. Usually, I find the recorded childhood/family memories of someone else either to personal to them to be really relevant to me or to sticky-sweet with nostalgia to be palatable in a long-term sense. Tesserae navigates these obstacles with admirable poise. Rather than creating a picture of her family for me to glance at cusorily, Levertov creates a landscape in which I can wander and linger at my leisure. The short narratives are full of mystery, wonder, and a quiet humor that is all Levertov. The pieces about her Father's conversion from Orthodox Judiasm to Christianity and his subsequent expulsion from the family, her mother and the pillows, and the whole family's beach holiday stick especially in my mind. I remember just how the Russian winter wind felt when her father found the scrap of paper with the gospel of John on it by the river, the texture of those pillows when hugged to the chest, and exactly what it is to be a girl entering puberty struggling with your own burgeoning body and intellect on the blinding sand during a family vacation. Individually, the pieces are magical bits of prose that display the experiences of the different family members like tiny finely-crafted curio boxes, as a collection they speak about history and identity. They engage the reader in an emotional dialog about where "self" comes from, and how it goes from there. Though I like her poetry, I think this is Levertov's best work.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars uniquely styled memoir, September 11, 2002
By 
Renee Thorpe (Karangasem, Bali) - See all my reviews
Published at author's age of 70, this collection of biographical vignettes feels to this reader like the happy work of a person who has lived fully, loved vigorously, and perceived every detail along the way. How fortunate to be able, in one's golden years, to look back with such wonder, sympathy, and good humor.

This short but powerful work absolutly enchanted this reader. The chapters are sometimes confessional, sometimes an homage to a person long gone, and always full of wonder and spirit.

She writes of interior settings, relationships, prophesies, family (a loving one), and cities (London during the blitz, for example). Her descriptions are never labored or complex, but details resonate in her simple yet expertly chosen words.

It is not so much that poet Denise Levertov has lived an extraordinary life (well, she did), but what makes this utterly magical book come alive is her ability to capture in prose her complex feelings about events and people of her childhood and early adulthood. As such, it validates the idea that we are all sensitive and deep. That is, she has a way of newly expressing feelings that we have all had but probably were never able to put into words.

Simply, I have never seen an autobiographical work that so powerfully expresses fervent sentiment, love, and emotion. Never shallow, always fresh. A remarkable work.

Excellent gift for your own mother.

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When my father was a little hoy in Russia an old pedlar used to come by from time to time, carrying a big sack over his shoulder. Read the first page
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