Masterfully drawing on a variety of voices and characters, James Tate joyfully offers his first book since winning the Pulitzer Prize in 1992 for his "Selected Poems."
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
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After a poodle diesWith a devil's aplomb, Tate inverts cliches to infiltrate the vocabularies of power in such mischievous poems as "A Manual of Enlargement," "Little Poems with Argyle Socks," and "What the City Was Like." The latter seems to caricature the late William Stafford, with its description of a salt-mining operation behind City Hall. For quality control, "someone / named Mildred" tasted each grain "until she became a stenographer / and moved away," thus devastating the community because "no one could read / her diacritical remarks." In the poetry of James Tate--or that of John Ashbery, Mark Levine, or Russell Edson, all of whom Tate superficially resembles--one looks for clues to the poet's mission. Perhaps a few hints come in the final poem, "Happy as the Day Is Long," in which the speaker feels sympathetic toward the Russians who created a language to communicate with aliens "but never get a postcard back." If it were uncovered that Tate was an inhabitant of another world instead of a middle-aged man from Kansas City, few of those rewarded by The Worshipful Company of Fletchers would be surprised. --Edward Skoog --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
All the cardinals flock to the nearest 7-eleven.
They drink slurpies until one of them throws up
And then he's the new pope.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
And again, and again, and again...,
By
This review is from: Worshipful Company of Fletchers (Paperback)
Over and over I return to this, one of Tate's most powerful collections. In "Worshipful Company of Fletchers", the poems possess that convincing and captivating power to not just construct their own world , but to play within it and stretch the rules of their own making. In the poems, Tate's perceptions and insights make complete sense, and when applied outside the bounds of Sigmar Polke's beautiful painting on the cover, the poignancy of this work resounds even louder. It's often that I return to this collection seeking that artfully piercing insight of Tate, and I am never disappointed.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Required Reading,
By H Van Doren (Ohio) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Worshipful Company of Fletchers (Paperback)
In James Tate's post-Pulitzer volume, "Worshipful Company of Fletchers," he presents a collection of lyric poetry that offers a constant sense of movement, as though he is guiding readers on a series of speculative journeys with the promise that we could wind up...anywhere. Reading Tate requires trust - trust that his "auto-suggestive" flow of language and ideas will result in a payoff - and it does...there is a payoff of discovery within these pages, his poems. In "Porch Theory," for example, he provides the familiar image of a porch, yet in this fairly short poem, we discover that the porch represents several generations of a family. Like his other works, this piece boasts an effective flow. There are wonderfully warm images of ghost stories, rainy nights, children sleeping, the physical sagging of the porch itself, dinner parties, a sleeping uncle, a playful pet and cocktails being served. Importantly, Tate repeats the visual of wicker across the stories of each generation, tying it with the actions of his characters on the porch: "More children / climb on the wicker couch, and grandmother / stares at the croquet set / in the corner, remembering the parrot / her grandfather brought back from the Pacific." This is important because we realize the wicker is permanent, yet the porch's inhabitants are not. We come to understand that Tate's "Porch Theory" is symbolic of life and death, but that he is celebrating the sense of immortality achieved with the arrival of new generations. This becomes evident midway through the poem with the lines, "The willow itself is finally dying...`Look at those clouds,' / someone says. `The face of God is in there, somewhere.'" Regardless of an individual reader's spirituality, Tate's intention is clear. This is a poem of hope, and it carries the sense of movement and speculative journey that ties it with other poems throughout the book. While "Porch Theory" takes place in the setting of one family's porch, it achieves the promise that we could indeed wind up anywhere because so much occurs within - from its ghost stories to its cocktails and, ultimately, in the memories of the grandmother. Through her, we don't "wind up" on the porch at all, but with the visual of a parrot in transit from the Pacific. This is the payoff. It is why we trust a poet with Tate's intuition and talent, and it is as rewarding as an afternoon of daydreaming on the porch.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tate will one day be seen for his incredible talent, we hope,
By A Customer
This review is from: Worshipful Company of Fletchers (Paperback)
The thing that makes me laugh is that Tate has one of the most unique and insightful ways of looking at the world, and yet he is read so very little. It's a classic case of the public at large not catching on to what is really happening in this world. This book in particular shows a wealth of maturity in his work that didn't really show up until the Eighties. He is able to sythesise the forms of speech that people use to plump themselves up so well that you can only identify with him as a fellow observer. In particular, the poem 'I Got Blindsided' is a high point. While the field of study into Tate's work may be a little sparse now, I believe that he has the skill and attention to the details of American life which will make him one of the truly great writers to come out of the age of the hippies.
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