| ||||||||||||||||||||||||
I have lost my Eurydice,In the end, of course, it's not Eurydice but his own pain that Orpheus immortalizes. "I made a harp of disaster / to perpetuate the beauty of my last love," Glück admits, but this is less a matter of personal glory than it is of sheer survival. And besides, she reminds us, "sometimes / our consolations are the costliest thing."
I have lost my lover,
and suddenly I am speaking French
and it seems to me I have never been in better voice;
it seems these songs
are songs of a high order.
Glück is an excruciatingly honest poet, but not, exactly, a confessional one. Vita Nova holds her life at arm's length, examining its particulars with almost Olympian detachment. Several of these poems include a self-interrogation, rendered in a voice equal parts prosecutor and witness for the defense: "Ask her how he touched her." "Ask her what she remembers." "Ask her if the fire hurts," demands a speaker in "The Burning Heart." Is this Eurydice's story as accident report? Séance? Cross-examination? Elsewhere, her troubles come rendered in a piercing gallows wit. In the volume's final poem, "Vita Nova" (the second of two with that same title), she dreams a dog, then dreams a custody fight with her ex. Be brave, she tells her hypothetical pet--"this is / all material; you'll wake up / in a different world, / you will eat again, you will grow up into a poet!" One senses that for Glück, it's all material--marriage, divorce, life, death, even and especially the ancient drama of myth. These are poems of rebirth, but of a particular kind--not of hope, and certainly not of youth, but of something far more important: poetry itself. In "The Nest," as Glück emerges from her grief, she feels her mind once again engage with the world, thinking "first, I love it. / Then, I can use it." --Mary Park --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gluck at her most distraught and extreme.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Vita Nova: Poems (Hardcover)
Gluck's work should be read fully. She is hard to browse through, not only because she writes her individual collections as novels, but because all eight books continue the story of her life, poems chorusing and coruscating. The surrealist yearnings of Firstborn, the development of wry rhetoric to hide real paing through Triumph of Achilles, the deadly precision of Ararat, all culminated in a ferociously ecstatic (in a biblical sense) book, Wild Iris. Since then, Gluck has been in new territory and taking a lot of flak for it. Vita Nova lacks the iron control usually associated with Gluck. She is trembling in this book, vulnerable. Her cracks beging to show. Indeed the myth is stitched clumsily to the life, because Gluck has had a go at depicting her favorite subject (herself) literally coming apart at the seams. Its a triumphant continuation of her work, and, as always, I am breathless to see what she does next. And next.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Vita Nova, no new news,
By A Customer
This review is from: Vita Nova: Poems (Hardcover)
Louise Gluck practices poetry like few others in the language. She does not write single poems; rather, she constructs volumes, she forms arcs of narrative and progression from single poems into books. Vita Nova, for me, does not succeed either as a volume, nor as a collection of individual poems. The central organizing logic, once again myth, the love of Orpheus and Euridice, offers few new insights into the tediums and betrayal and insoluble dilemmas of love. It is as if Gluck is traveling in a groove she has worn well over the years, perhaps too well. The stitching of myth with her own life was done better, though still clumsily, in Meadowlands. This is not Ararat, nor is it The Wild Iris, nor Descending Figure, volumes that invoke ache. Still, there are some excellent poems in this volume, some heartbreaking lines, and lines that communicate with immediacy and grace and utter wryness ("I thought my life was over and my heart was broken. Then my heart was broken."). But there are also poems that drag, mired in their own metaphors. Uncompelling. This is a volume that perhaps her seasoned readers will have to learn to love, at least appreciate, like Meadowlands. For those who are not familiar with Gluck, be assured that even this outing, not her best, still outshines most poets publishing today. For a true introduction, beginning readers should start with Ararat or The Wild Iris. Vita Nova should be saved for a time when you love her so much, you'll be able to forgive her at her half-mast. In the fleet of her own work, this is no flagship.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Orpheus and Eurydice--Revisted,
By A Customer
This review is from: Vita Nova: Poems (Hardcover)
Though I don't feel this volume of poetry compares to some of Gluck's previous works ("Descending Figure," "The Wild Iris"), "Vita Nova" does evoke a great deal of sympathy for the doomed mythological lovers Orpheus and Eurydice. Throughout, the poet questions the aging process and the fact that spring, while functioning as a bringer of new life, also brings death and perpetuates loss. As in "Meadowlands," there are many poems which speak to subsequent poems, or include rich, sometimes funny, dialogue. Overall, "Vita Nova" is unusual with respect to subject-matter and is beautifully-written.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
|
|
Tags Customers Associate with This Product(What's this?)Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
|
|
This product's forum
Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
|
Related forums
|