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Sylva Fischerova is one of the most formidable Czech poets of her
generation. A distinguished classicist who teaches at Charles
University in Prague, she writes poetry with a vivid imagination as
well as historical reach, and was first published in English as a
young poet by Bloodaxe in 1990. Her poetry moves in and out of
historical events, with an understanding and loving eye on our
frailties as well as our corruptive acts, against the backdrop of
her commanding sense of space and time, and 'makes beauty from
monsters'. Mixing semantic and sonorous sense, her poems come to
life through metamorphosed moments, showing that nothing can be
taken literally in a world 'endowed with sense and meaning'.
"How direct and fierce Stuart Friebert's poems are. His collection
Floating Heart draws from the reservoir of memory re-lived and
re-suffered. Unsparing and searching, shining with lucidity,
attentive to both the anguish of history and the intimacies of
singular lives, these extraordinary poems are pinpoint precise.
They let us know that some wounds do not close but remain open as
proof of how fully alive we must be for the sake of what matters
most. How clear-headed these poems are in their authority. They
remind us of the dignity that inheres in telling the truth."-Lee
Upton, Author of Undid in the Land of Undone and The Tao of
Humiliation "Stuart Friebert's poems are not afraid to risk the
prosaic; just when the reader may think they settle into narrative
familiarity, they take sudden, unanticipated turns. Dreamlike
shifts occur, and unconscious insights surface, often disruptively.
Marked by bleak humor and imaginative audacity, the poems mirror
our least understood and darkest possibilities in ways that
surprise, delight, and perturb. The range of subjects and tones is
remarkable, as is the willingness to let the subject shape the poem
and take both poet and reader to unexpected places.-David Young,
Author of Field of Light and Shadow: Selected and New Poems "Part
fable, more than a dash of grit, always sane and wryly out there,
these poems astonish, refiguring world and its grief in exact
startling ways. I admit it: I love this work, thinking how those
'little xxxes' at the end of letters really are 'curiously still, '
how 'it-bits of blackness ... learn to be lightning, ' how
childhood never stops, how we age and die and keep. Somewhere in
this book, Voltaire is screaming. Then there's Kafka on a train in
Prague who 'smiles. He doesn't seem to give a damn.' But haunted as
he is, Friebert does and does, unto pleasure and rare
surprise."-Marianne Boruch, Author of Cadaver, Speak
One of the hallmarks of FIELD magazine has always been its
attention to what poets have to say about poetry. Many of these
essays--by William Stafford, Denise Levertov, Gary Snyder, Adrienne
Rich, Donald Hall, Robert Bly, and Sandra McPherson, among
others--have become classics. This revised and expanded collection
of essays from the magazine provides a rich and stimulating
perspective on the state of contemporary poetry, as seen through
the eyes of the poets themselves.
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