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The ever-adventurous author of Louise in Love looks to the visual
arts for inspiration with this astonishing fourth collection. The
poems in The Eye Like a Strange Balloon find their seed in
paintings, film, video, photographs, and collage, and the end
results are something more than a sum of their parts. Beginning
with a painting done in 2003, the poems move backward in time to 1
B.C., where an architectural fragment is painted on an
architectural fragment, highlighting visual art's strange
relationship between the image and the thing itself. The total
effect is exhilarating-a wholly original, personal take on art
history coupled with Bang's sly and elegant commentary on poetry's
enduring subjects: Love, Death, Time, and Desire. The recipient of
numerous prizes and awards, Bang stands at the front of American
poetry with this new work, asking more of the English language, and
enticing and challenging the reader.
In this stunning new collection of poems, Mary Jo Bang jettisons
the reader into the dreamlike world of Louise, a woman in love.
With language delicate, smooth, and wryly funny, Louise is on a
voyage without destination, traveling with a cast of enigmatic
others, including her lover, Ham. Louise is as musical as she is
mysterious and the reader is invited to listen. In her world,
anything goes, provided it is breathtaking.
Bang, whose first collection was the prize-winning Apology for
Want, both parodies and pays homage to the lyric tradition,
borrowing its lush music and dramatic structure to give new voice
to the old concerns of the late Romantic poets. Louise in Love is a
dramatic postmodern verse-novel with an eloquent free-floating
narration. The poems, rife with literary allusion, take journeys to
distant lands. And, like anyone on a voyage without a destination,
they are endlessly questioning of the enigmatic world around
them.
This striking, oversized book, designed to evoke encyclopedias, is
a highly creative amalgam of collage with a political bent and
poetry. From 2011 to 2012, American artist Mel Chin (b. 1951)
extracted all of the images from a twenty-five-volume set of Funk
& Wagnall's Universal Standard Encyclopedia (ca. 1953-56) and
began visually re-editing. Thousands of images rendered by
photomechanical reproduction that served a populist, mid-century
encyclopedia are reconfigured with 21st-century hindsight and
idiosyncratic connections that convey social and artistic
commentaries. Surrealism, humor, sarcasm, politics, history, and
beauty permeate these sometimes raucous, often confounding, but
consistently stunning images. Over 500 black-and-white collages are
accompanied by twenty-five poems, one per encyclopedia volume,
commissioned by Chin and author Nick Flynn specifically for this
publication. Writers range from the well-known to the surprising.
The Funk & Wag from A to Z offers mischievous fun with pointed
commentary and hilarity. Distributed for The Menil Collection
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