The Great Fires: Poems, 1982-1992
by Jack Gilbert
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 214)
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read-in-2008
recommended to elizabeth by:
Britta
recommends it for: humans, humans growing old, humans experiencing grief/loss, humans in great swells of longing & love
recommends it for: humans, humans growing old, humans experiencing grief/loss, humans in great swells of longing & love
Oh my goodness! What an extraordinary book of poems, a book I can’t believe I’ve gone this long without having in my life. Thanks to Britta for introducing me to this collection.
I like when people share a line or two in their reviews, but I just can't choose so here's a whole poem:
"The Lives of Famous Men"
Trying to scrape the burned soup from my only pan
with a spoon after midnight by oil lamp
because if I do not cook the mackerel
this hot night it will kill ...more
I like when people share a line or two in their reviews, but I just can't choose so here's a whole poem:
"The Lives of Famous Men"
Trying to scrape the burned soup from my only pan
with a spoon after midnight by oil lamp
because if I do not cook the mackerel
this hot night it will kill ...more
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Read in July, 2003
I was out in the woods yesterday with some friends, and we were staring at some beautifully almost-symmetric rocks in a creek bed. We started talking about wabi-sabi, which reminded me of the poem "Ruins and Wabi" from this book. That poem reminded me of several other poems in this book, which reminded me that this book is unbearably awesome.
Four years after first reading it this is still my favorite book of poetry, hands down.
Four years after first reading it this is still my favorite book of poetry, hands down.
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By far one of my favorite collections of poetry. I keep a copy of this and Refusing Heaven on either my nightstand or coffee table at all times and find myself returning to them again and again.
Gilbert is plain, honest, subtle, relentlessly introspective. He is deeply concerned with the shortcomings of language and memory, but puts each to use exquisitely in his poetry.
Gilbert is plain, honest, subtle, relentlessly introspective. He is deeply concerned with the shortcomings of language and memory, but puts each to use exquisitely in his poetry.
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One of the best books of poetry I've ever read! Gilbert somehow has a way of reaching farther into the human experience, and then putting it into words, then I've had the delight and wonder of witnessing before. I can read this book over and over again. There is something about these poems that is beautifully real.
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Read in September, 2007
Feeling intimate with being, I read this book in one sitting, on the hunch that it would match my mood. It did.
An essential book, unflinching and unfailingly lucid in its pressure on and extension of language, sense, and metaphor to represent the complexities and depths of intimately lived experience.
An essential book, unflinching and unfailingly lucid in its pressure on and extension of language, sense, and metaphor to represent the complexities and depths of intimately lived experience.
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Read it. Re-read it.
Keep reading the poems in this book over and over.
Also, there is a small chapbook, at the Special Collections Library at the University of Arizona in Tucson, that is hands down worth reading, too.
It has poems by Michico in it...
Keep reading the poems in this book over and over.
Also, there is a small chapbook, at the Special Collections Library at the University of Arizona in Tucson, that is hands down worth reading, too.
It has poems by Michico in it...
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Likely my favourite collection, next to the complete Larkin.
Two hundred years ago, the London shop boys yelled
at people going by, What do you lack? A terrible
question to hear every day. "Less and less," I think.
Two hundred years ago, the London shop boys yelled
at people going by, What do you lack? A terrible
question to hear every day. "Less and less," I think.
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Read in September, 2007
Meditations, elegies, and nature poems from a clearly experienced poet; overall somewhat uneven but certainly something to learn from.
More here:
www.robertpeake.com/archives/3...
More here:
www.robertpeake.com/archives/3...
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Gilbert uses words as if they're precious gems--with great care. This book has become my center--I turn to it in times of great indecision and it calms. Read "Married" and you'll know the full breadth of Gilbert's power...
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Read in January, 2007
Jack has a plain spoken subtle genius about him. The elegies are among the best in poetry right now.
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After you read "the forgotten dialect of the heart" you will never feel the same way about poetry.
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Read in March, 2008
one of the best covers. lovely dense blocks of poems. born in pittsburgh!
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Read in April, 2008
going to reread this one right away
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