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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Poetry in celebration of prayer, gratitude, suffering & joy., August 7, 2000
Mark Jarman's poetry collected in Unholy Sonnets explores the relationship between what the soul desires and what creation allows, the nature of prayer, incarnation, judgement, and grace, trying to imagine a God that cares about individual yearning, gratitude, suffering, and joy. Kenosis: An absence turned to presence is confusing./Take Mary, who took for a gardener/One that she knew was dead and in his grave,/One that she then called Master, when he stood/Before and said, "Mary," and resisted/Her startled, tender, human wish to touch./We want to fill the emptiness with meaning./I had a friend whose father died in his armchair./And when my friend came home, there was a drape/With the body slumped beneath it, still in the chair./She said, "I knew that must be him. And yet,/It was a shock to see him sitting there,/So present and not present, this big man,/Filling his place as much or more than ever. ld:product_group
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a new type of devotional poetry, October 19, 2000
Jarman's Unholy Sonnets is a sequence of sonnets written to follow his previous collection, Questions for Ecclesiastes. Almost every type of sonnet is found in this collection. The sonnets are a form of devotional poetry, unlike what has been written before, such as Donne's sonnets, which is why Jarman wrote Questions for Ecclesiastes and Unholy Sonnets, as a response to Donne. Jarman's sonnets are a different type of devotional poetry. He doesn't just worship God, but asks questions about the nature of God and spirituality, thus the title unholy. One of the things Jarman does in these sonnets is to question God with lines like "Soften the blow, imagined God, and give/Me one good reason for this punishment" from sonnet 3. And sonnet 6 where he questions his relationship with God. And Jarman's poetry continues on this way throughout the entire sequence, fifty sonnets dealing with prayer, judgement, religion, and even science versus religion. Most of the sonnets in the sequence are pretty good, though a few, like sonnet 1, 3, and the prologue sonnet stand out as excellent poems, and there are a few that are truly horrible like 27 and 35 which are unclear and the rhymes are either sound forced or just aren't very good. But the well crafted sonnets outweigh the poorer sonnets.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Unholy and Holy, April 13, 2003
Paradoxically, "Unholy Sonnets" are at once Christian-based relgious poems that challenge conventional christianity. A gifted poet, Jarman balances the hum-drum and the monotony of every-day life against the transcendence of Christianity. These poems present the paradoxes of Christianity also, the least of which being how one can both worship Jesus Christ and cast him in human form.The sonnet form is perfectly suited for this investigation, as it, like conventional Christianity, is bound by rules and conventions. Jarman, however, moves fluidly in the framework of the sonnet form, railing against at times and settling into it comfortable at other times. "Unholy Sonnets" bypasses "Questions for Ecclesiastes" by leaps and bounds. Those who miss the beauty of these poems simply don't know how to read poetry. There are no forced rhymes here. There are no forced themes here. These poems break with the standard workshop-model tripe that pollutes today's literary magazines. Mark Jarman may very well be this century's answer to George Herbert or John Donne.
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