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The latest from former U.S. laureate Collins (The Trouble with Poetry and Other Poems) again shows the deft, often self-mocking touch that has made him one of America's bestselling poets: while this volume hardly breaks new ground, it should fly off the shelves. To his jokes about, and against, his own poetizing, Collins now adds two new emphases: on life in France, where (to judge by the poems) he has spent some time and (more pervasively) a preoccupation with the end of life. Collins is never carefree, but he is, as always, accessible and high-spirited, making light even when telling himself that nothing lasts: "Vermont, Early November" finds the poet in his kitchen, wringing his signature charm from the eternal carpe diem theme, "determined to seize firmly/ the second Wednesday of every month." For Collins, such are his stock in trade, humorous and serious at once. His tongue-in-cheek assault on the "gloom and doubt in our poetry" is his only remedy for the loneliness that (even for him) shadows all poems: "this is a poem, not a novel," he laments, "and the only characters here are you and I,/ alone in an imaginary room/ which will disappear after a few more lines." (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved."This love for the petty things,/part natural from the slow eye of childhood,/part a literary affectation" is endemic to these poems by former poet laureate Collins. Collins takes aim with wit and irony to attend the ordinary as well as the extraordinary. Some poems are written in Paris, where, in one, the poet imagines completing Paul Valéry's wandering, abandoned poems. Some are conscious of themselves, addressing the notion of the reader as well as the writer: "Where are you, reader,/who have not paused in your walk/to look over my shoulder/to see what I am jotting in my notebook?" And some address larger issues: the passage of time, death, life's purpose. "Crashing through the iron gates of life/is what it's all about," the poet decides as he stretches out on the carpet in service to the day he has chosen to seize. "Poetry is a place where both [listening and being listened to] are true at once,/where meaning only one thing at a time spells malfunction." In these poems, readers will find Collins honoring both with bits of wisdom and considerable delight. Essential for contemporary poetry collections.
—Karla Huston
Adult/High School
Accessibility is the word that comes immediately to mind when considering Billy Collins's poetry, and this collection will surely add to his popularity and praise. Few, if any, poets writing today can match his combination of wit, humor, and irony with equal measures of close observation, intelligence, and passion. Most of his poems can be appreciated with a single reading, but many reveal deeper thought and emotion with repeated readings. Collins is a master at employing simple, direct language to explore the wonders and mysteries of this world. Seemingly without effort, and never forcefully, he consistently invites readers to join him as he notices, considers, and comments on a wide range of profound and mundane aspects of life. All of this is particularly important when readers are relatively inexperienced in the world of poetry. It is safe to say that the legions of teens bored to tears by the likes of Eliot, Pound, and Auden in their English lit classes might form a more accepting view of poetry if they were first introduced to the genre by the work of Collins. This collection includes a poem titled "Oh, MY God!" which, in nine short lines, and with devilish wit, captures the essence of that all-too-popular exclamation in contemporary teen culture. And it is but one example of the many choice nuggets to be found here.-Robert Saunderson, Berkeley Public Library, CA
August in Paris
Brightly Colored Boats Upturned on the Banks of the Charles
Searching
High
The Four-Moon Planet
Evasive Maneuvers
August
The Poems of Others
Aubade
No Things
The First Night
January in Paris
Ballistics
Pornography
Greek and Roman Statuary
Quiet
Scenes of Hell
Hippos on Holiday
Carpe Diem
Lost
Dublin
New Year's Day
The Day Lassie Died
Tension
The Golden Years
Vermont, Early November
The Effort
The Lamps Unlit
China
Looking Forward
(detail)
Le Chien
Addendum
On the Death of a Next-Door Neighbor
Separation
Adage
The Flight of the Statues
Passivity
Ornithography
Baby Listening
Bathtub Families
Despair
The Idea of Natural History at Key West
The Fish
A Dog on His Master
The Great American Poem
What Love Does
Divorce
Liu Yung
This Little Piggy Went to Market
Old Man Eating Alone in a Chinese Restaurant
The Breather
Oh, My God!
The Mortal Coil
The Future
Envoy
Anonymous
Posted September 21, 2008
Collins just gets better and better. This is his best book of poetry yet. From the wild fun of 'Hippos on Holiday' to the poingancy of 'On the Death of a Next-Door Neighbor' it is a great read whether you are a poetry lover or not!
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Ball-less-tics. The reason for the popularity of this bloke escapes me. Yet he is all too quickly considered the bee's knees across the pond. His safe, unchallenging poems are bereft of passion and seem quite lazily written. And no I don't mean effortless, I simply mean flat out lazy. He reminds me of one of those "master painters" that pays a school of apprentice painters to paint his masterpieces, then he gets up off his spoiled bum and rather grandly signs it while shamelessly taking full credit for. I tried, believe me, I tried, to find something to redeem his lifeless, colourless, odorless work but it just wasn't there. A cold machine programmed to pump out stock poetry could have done better, been more human in tenor. Perhaps his popularity signals the death of poetry as we know it. Another miserable thought: this bloke has a new book on the way. I'm sure the literary lemmings will be queuing up to plant their tulips into his lifeless, colourless, odourless bum soon enough.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.This eighth collection by Billy Collins proves once again that poetry can be both intelligent and intelligible. Through his bestselling books and tenure as US Poet Laureate (2001-2003), Collins has blazed a difficult trail to win the reading public back to poetry. The poems he writes and advocates have the reader-friendly quality of "accessibility," much scorned in some academic circles today. Collins himself prefers to call such poetry "easy to enter," maintaining that poems may contain ambiguity and even mystery if only they will first allow the reader a starting point of understanding (i.e., plain English).
Whether in a domestic scene or travelogue, we are given the beckoning portal of universal experience: the pleasures of food, foibles, including those of poets; nature's healing balm; and the perennial striving of love to overcome our innate separateness. Themes light or grave are treated with charm, gentleness, and a sense of humor that is by turns sophisticated, childlike, and self abasing.
An excerpt from the poem "Despair" will sell the reader on Collins' irresistible variety of wit. After referring to "So much gloom and doubt in our poetry," the poet wonders what "the ancient Chinese poets/ would make of all this,/ these shadows and empty cupboards?" The poet's answer to his own question is a meditation containing an upbeat and comic resolve:
Today, with the sun blazing in the trees,
my thoughts turn to the great
tenth-century celebrator of experience,
Wa-Hoo, whose delight in the smallest things
could hardly be restrained,
and to his joyous counterpart in the western provinces,
Ye-Hah.
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Overview
In this moving and playful collection, Billy Collins touches on an array of subjects—love, death, solitude, youth, and aging—delving deeper than ever before into the intricate folds of life.