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Words by the Water (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction)
 
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Words by the Water (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction) [Paperback]

William Jay Smith (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction August 19, 2008

William Jay Smith has been one of the most respected figures on the literary scene for more than half a century. Two of his thirteen poetry collections were finalists for the National Book Award, and the present volume is clearly the work of a true American master.

The volume opens with a poetic sequence, "The Atoll," concerning the tiny coral island of Palmyra during World War II. Finding himself on the narrow rim of an extinct volcano at almost the exact center of the Pacific, water on all sides, breakers pounding the reef, the poet evokes the distinct sensation that he had of being at the heart of Herman Melville’s "oceans vast." In lines resonant and memorable, he recalls the "terrifying beauty" of standing at night on what seemed then the very edge of the earth.

The poet next addresses our current daily terror—war and destruction. In "Invitation to Ground Zero" he presents a moving tribute to a victim of the September 11 disaster, while in "Willow Wood" a soldier, having recently lost both his legs in a roadside blast, utters without a trace of self-pity strong words on future wars. Tragedy marks many of these pages, but Smith does not forget his lifelong commitment to witty and satiric verse. To introduce several hilarious pieces, he reprints the celebrated poem "Dachshunds." Simplicity and musicality have given his wedding songs a wide audience. Several of them are here, including an extraordinary new one, "The Bouquet."

Variety has always characterized Smith's work. Words by the Water is particularly varied and unusually youthful and fresh.

(2008)

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Smith turns 90 this year, so don’t carp about the several previously collected poems in this book. Instead, appreciate the book’s exquisite arrangement and the concern of the collection as a whole with linking eras of life and art. The first section, “The Atoll,” includes three poems Smith wrote when stationed on Palmyra in the Pacific in 1942. They conjure the feeling of being at the end of the world in precise, jewel-like stanzas; their since-composed companions are wonder-filled, looser-lined memoirs. The light verses in “The Deer and the Dachshund” often bring art and poetry’s past—also the poet’s past, in the previously unpublished “Oxford Doggerel,” on his 1947 Rhodes scholarship year—into the present. “The Hunt” contains modern examples of one of the oldest poetic forms, namely “Riddles,” and in “The Greatest Wealth” are four appropriately lovely examples of another hoary genre, the epithalamium, or wedding song. Only in the last section is anything like a swan song heard (perhaps the titular water is the Styx), and it is consolatory, not mournful. --Ray Olson --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

Smith turns 90 this year, so don't carp about the several previously collected poems in this book. Instead, appreciate the book's exquisite arrangement and the concern of the collection as a whole with linking eras of life and art.

(Ray Olson Booklist 2009)

In this utterly delightful book, variety is matched by insight.

(Tom D'Evelyn Providence Journal 2008)

Few poets go on writing well into old age, but the Louisiana-born William Jay Smith is one of them. Still going strong, his poetry, marked by great technical skill, is witty and satiric, poignant and humane... Smith's poetry offers sensuous pleasure and intellectual delight.

(Jeffrey Meyers New Criterion )

Words by the Water is very much recommended reading for poetry fans.

(James A. Cox Midwest Book Review )

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Paperback: 96 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press (August 19, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801890659
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801890659
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.8 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: #2,760,306 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars An anthology of one of the great American minds of poetry, William Jay Smith, December 12, 2008
This review is from: Words by the Water (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction) (Paperback)
Chosen by the government as a consultant on poetry, "Words by the Water" is an anthology of one of the great American minds of poetry, William Jay Smith. Drawing on his massive experience as a man and a scholar of poetry, he presents some of his own, and fails to disappoint. "Words by the Water" is very much recommended reading for poetry fans. "Contemplation of Conspiracy":Where the table-leg projects into the yellow autumn/sunlight/like the poor premise of an argument,/the plotters gather, rotting wood at a creek's end/tirelessly planning the devastation of the spirit,/wiring the heart for a final explosion.//Where can they lead you but over the bridges of beetroot/into the country of spiders?//Do not follow them to their camp pitched in a cranny; bring your fist down hard on the table .../ and send them flying.
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