In his third book of poems, Mark Levine continues his exploration
of the rhythms and forms of memory. "The Wilds" is set in the
border regions between natural and cultivated states, childhood and
adulthood, past and present. "We were boys," says the speaker of
the opening poem, "boyish, almost girls. Left alone on the roof, we
would have dwindled." Austere and lyrical, the music of these poems
resonates with echoes of poetic tradition-Wyatt, Jonson, Milton,
Eliot-yet is singularly modern.
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