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Paperback Above the River: The Complete Poems Book

ISBN: 0374522820

ISBN13: 9780374522827

Above the River: The Complete Poems

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

One of the most admired American poets of his generation, James Wright (1927-80) wrote contemplative, sturdy, and generous poems with an honesty, clarity, and stylistic range matched by very few--then... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Sublime Poetry Slightly Flawed by Format

I hate to give this work anything less than 5-stars, because at the moment (and probably most future moments) I revere James Wright's poetry. He makes blue collar blackened river Ohio come alive riven death with darkness and life. So this book is a must for poetry lovers.Where it distracts me is the attempts at completeness is a difficult editor's dilemma and one that doesn't serve the poet or the poet's reader well here. There are two James Wright's out there (this book presents three), as is true with most sublimated artist that pass through a learning phase before hitting on their voice, their style. James Wright started as a formalist (not my favored style) hailing structure and rhyme sometimes at the expense of meaning and language (disclaimer...one man's humble opinion belies a personal taste and no two taste buds seem the same). The book of course being a complete work, offers all of those poems of bandied prose. And then the editor offers a bridge or break of sorts in Wright's translated works of German and Spanish poets. Wright was a great poet in English, but the gift of gifted translation should have been left to the likes of W.S. Merwin, Anthony Kerrigan, Charles Tomlinson, and Stephen Mitchell for Neruda, Paz, and Rilke. So, Wright's "Above the River," really first breaks the surface on page 119 after his epiphany to all thing free form. It is then that his poetry sings darkly. I leave you with some of Wright's beautiful language (there's plenty to be had). Buy the book for the rest.In Fear of HarvestsIt has happened Before: nearby,The nostrils of slow horsesBreathe evenly,And the brown bees drag their high garlands,Heavily,Toward hives of snow.

flawless poetic mastery?

James Wright was of course one of the 20th century's great master poets. Each poem in this book bears his stamp of completely precise, beautiful communication. His writing can teach about the art. It does, though, seem kind of pretentious to me the way this one approach to poetry, which has its sense in it, is the only way for the words to be poetry, which James Wright must have believed or he wouldn't have done it that same way every time.

Universality in Regional Voice

This collection of Wright's work includes his experiments with formal blank verse, translations of German poets, experimental prose pieces, and characteristic free verse that made him one of America's strongest national poets with a regional identity. Wright's topics range from the pastoral landscape of people, wildlife, and industry near his Ohio hometown to the philosophical challenges of individuality, death, renewal, and union. The gray mountains, coal trains, steel bridges and murky Ohio River take their places beside docile horses, musical insects and colorful characters. But never does Wright falter to the mere reporting of a landscape through his poetry; the vision is always fresh, exacting, tense, and redemptive. I have used his work with many of my English students, and the feedback is celebratory. If you are a fan of poetry or a student of the craft, familiarize yourself with this book. Donald Hall's wonderful preface does justice to one of America's most fondly remembered poets.

Thought-provoking AND understandable contemporary poetry!

James Wright's mastery of the traditional formal elements of poetry coupled with his contemporary and timeless themes makes his collection of poetry one of the best I have ever read. The first reading of his works leaves the reader wondering. The second brings comprehension. The third and any subsequent readings mesmerize as Wright's web of imagery and contemplation becomes more intricate. It is a shame that more readers do not know of his fascinating works.

A must-have collection of poetry

Both straightforward and evocative, James Wright's poetry is concerned with life's minutae and immense mystery. Combining a rural eye for the country with a critical intellect, many of his poems flirt with the central polarity of existence and death, particularly of the spirit, which he saw often in the blue collar world of his youth. Wright's poems find redemption through immersion in all of its aspects, much like the whores of Wheeling, West Virginia emerging from the Ohio River "drying their wings". The hopeless struggle for meaning and value imbue life with just those qualities, as he writes in 'Small Frogs Killed on the Highway': Still/I would leap too/Into the light/If I had the chance.I recommend that you leap into the light for this book of poems. It is an important collection of poetry for anyone interested in post-war American poetry or American poetry in general.
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