Presents a selection of poetry that explores the complex power of the sexual bond and its extraordinary ability to transcend all spiritual, emotional, and physical boundaries
Lush language describes a passionate but past love affair. Shades of longing and desire permeate its pages. It has a confessional feel to it, all of the poems related to each other and to the poet's lived experience. The end poems will be familiar to anyone who has loved and lost and found him or herself alone. In "Beeches," the poet retreats to the woods and bathes in the nostalgia the walk engenders in him to a point where he is able to let the past be, to find some peace ...
"To say that I miss you is to say almost nothing To say that the forest is the sanctuary of ghosts Is only the first step of my own giving way --
Not the old giving up -- just the old giving thanks."
Elegant, sensuous, delicate, ephemeral. Somehow lush and diaphanous at the same time -- muscular and ghostly. And I think "ghostly" is the word that best captures the experience of these poems, this collection, for me: I am haunted by the erotic grief I find in these poems.
The ideal way to read this book is aloud, in bed, to a companion. Mysterious, sensual, intellectual - a good book for those who love love but might be tired of Neruda.