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Fierce Elegy

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The powerful new collection from legendary American poet Peter Gizzi, reckoning with the transformative power of elegy through poems of lament and love

‘I am awestruck, dumbfounded … a masterwork’ Ocean Vuong
'Transcendent ... He identifies the thing we're all searching for' The New Yorker

In Fierce Elegy, Peter Gizzi contends with a decade of grief, and learns to transform a broken heart into new strength. These are poems of loss; of love; of the strangeness of being a self amid the fury of the world; and of our ongoing closeness with the dead. They are soaring yet grounded, vulnerable and brave. Ears attuned, grip assured. Mind free.

64 pages, Kindle Edition

Published July 4, 2024

15 people are currently reading
206 people want to read

About the author

Peter Gizzi

55 books55 followers
Educated at New York University, Brown University, and the State University of New York at Buffalo, poet Peter Gizzi is the author of several collections of poetry, including Threshold Songs (2011), The Outernationale (2007), and Artificial Heart (1998).

Gizzi uses both narrative and lyrical gestures to engage and question distance and light in his search for the unmapped. Reflecting on the question of whether his work is narrative or lyric, Gizzi stated in an interview with Poetry Daily, “I think I am a narrative poet—I’m just narrating my bewilderment as a citizen.”

(Source: Peter Gizzi @ The Poetry Foundation)

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5 stars
58 (29%)
4 stars
86 (43%)
3 stars
28 (14%)
2 stars
21 (10%)
1 star
3 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Jon Nakapalau.
6,533 reviews1,032 followers
June 24, 2025
Embracing loss sounds counterproductive; to have to embrace something that one wanted to hold onto is hard to fathom. Yet we will all find ourselves in this position at some point in life (that point growing sharper with age). Peter Gizzi has looked at his in a both challenging and empathetic way; a way that delineates between choice and acceptance.
Profile Image for Emilie.
218 reviews12 followers
May 25, 2024
This feels like the deep poetry you write on the bus home from a night out after you realise maybe brown liquor doesn’t make you horny, like you thought, but rather melancholic and a bit pretentious.

Starting strong, the first poem makes sure we don’t miss the point:

Like when I found you in the back of my mind.
I am talking about people and the night.
People inside the night.
The night and what we are made of.
The things and the people.
The signal and its noise.

Other times I got a little lost:

I was one day. Possible like any. Either faster. There
was one day. From might have been. Were lovely
days. And summer. My birds. Had trusted some.
Was missing some.

Honestly, I’m not sure what to make of this or the several positive reviews. Maybe I’ll come back to it after a drink :)
Profile Image for Ada.
527 reviews334 followers
March 17, 2025
El T.S Eliot d'aquest any és un poemari molt breu, amb alguns poemes de versos d'una o dues paraules. M'ha agradat anar-me trobant formes tan diferents. La brevetat no treu la feina increïble del darrera, les profunditats a les que arriba, els diferents paisatges per on ens guia. Una elegia escrita durant 10 anys que ens arriba ara amb força i amb totes les cares del dol.
Profile Image for ay.
90 reviews
October 24, 2023
Everyday I want to give this book a different rating. It’s great and I don’t really like it. I love it and can’t remember a thing.
Profile Image for salva.
246 reviews1 follower
August 26, 2024
mmmmm liked his previous books better
Profile Image for Stephen Ramsek.
39 reviews24 followers
February 22, 2025
This is lyric poetry done right, no pretenses, showiness, all atmosphere and emotion. It lives up to its title in the best way possible
Profile Image for juch.
286 reviews52 followers
May 9, 2024
Read this aloud taking turns w my classmates in class. Rly beautiful and brave (not afraid of sentiment or cliche). Elemental
Profile Image for Rudrashree Makwana.
Author 1 book71 followers
July 5, 2024
The poems are about people, how we perceive the world, seeing life from the soul of a poet, muse, words, haunting memories, love, loss, grief, life, expressing emotions through painting, rebuilding memories, after life, inspiration and going though myriad of emotions throughout the life. Sometimes life feels hollow while sometimes it feels complete and the next second, loneliness consumes it. How we feel lonely being surrounded by people and then darkness consumes us. The poems are deep, evocative, poignant, touching and reaches to the soul.

4.5

Thanks to the Publisher and Author
Profile Image for Jeff.
1,374 reviews27 followers
November 25, 2024
I saw where someone (another poet?) identified “Fierce Elegy” as one of the best poetry collections of the year. I spent a chunk of Sunday morning reading the poems aloud to an empty house. I even looked up a few videos of the author reciting poems from this collection.

Unfortunately, this is exactly the poetry that I cannot stand: no attention paid to form or structure, no regard to conventional poetic elements (rhyme, rhythm, clever wordplay), and written in such an esoteric style that it’s nearly impossible to make heads or tails of it.

Obviously, the poet is playing with the idea of an elegy. Elegies are poems of contemplation, usually about the dead. They are laments. These poems are not just lamenting, though. They are also poems about love, death, joy, poetry, and nature . . . but beyond that, I can’t make much sense of any of it.
Profile Image for Dawn.
126 reviews
January 23, 2025
I’m sure I must be missing something as I trust the TS Eliot prize but I’ve only just finished this book and already I can hardly remember it? nothing really memorable, hard-hitting or interesting to read and perhaps a little too abstract for my tastes. there were a few poems I enjoyed but most of my appreciation of the writing went to individual lines or ideas, rather than the poems or collection itself. I will be reading more Peter Gizzi though — I feel like this is different from his usual style and I am interested to see his skill in crafting sounds and fragments applied to something that is perhaps a little more my taste.
Profile Image for Chloe Jones.
45 reviews2 followers
February 16, 2025
‘but the verb is to be, to be vigilant and hungry across time’
Profile Image for mary stuart.
288 reviews
May 25, 2024
“are not all the sounds on my lyre about you”

Love lovely lovely! And I read that he teaches for the MFA program at UMASS Amherst! My desire to attend the MFA program there continues growing…
Profile Image for hannah.
294 reviews8 followers
June 15, 2024
“sometimes it’s hard
to know the outline
of a body, there’s
so many people inside.
so much room
for love and mayhem.”

i am a simple woman: give me a poetry collection about elegies of undying love? grief? amidst a broken world? sign. me. up. i am ready to devour it all, and what a delight it was! it’s super short—i read it on the bus like any other pretentious reader and felt satisfied by this wonderful feast. while some poems have faded from memory, there are select ones i want to revisit over and over. i loved the rhythm of each line, it truly felt like elegies but brought me alive with their lyrical beauty, if you get what i mean. but i also understand that each poem strikes you differently, at different moments in your life, and in various ways. i really couldn’t hate a poem—it’s hard to criticize word vomit when it is poured out so gracefully.

the poems i liked:
— consider the wound
— roxy music
— romanticism
— notes on sound and vision
— creeley song

“and in my outrage, i am immortal
because i love—”

????? i’m gagged ?????

i didn’t expect them to approve my request but huge thank you to penguin press uk for this e-arc 🫶🏻
Profile Image for JB.
38 reviews
September 2, 2023
(Some first inroads to reading these poems)

This one begins in a manner worthy of this book's name and purpose -- to create poems (elegies) capable of transform[ing] a broken heart in a fierce world into a fierce heart in a broken world" -- with the lines:

Thus far we have spoken
only the codes,
a litany of survival.
Thus spoke the silvered asphodel
next to the factory ruin. (1)

I love this rhyming -- thematic as well as somehow almost linguistic -- of "survival" and "ruin" as well as the direct thus-ness of a concrete image of asphodel next to the factory (I can almost see it in the paper mills in Holyoke) following the very abstract first three lines. These two sentences, these five lines, really knocked me over, and are again an example of what I find powerful about PG's work when it's at its best -- a sort of seeing philosophical fact, dark feeling, in the light of wood grain... That silvered asphodel is a fierce heart in a broken world, silvered as in the way it shines in flood lamps at night and silvered as in getting older, going gray from the stress of living in a world beneath a "chemical sky" (as he puts it in Now It's Dark) you can't get out from.

It was best to let the moon unravel
and focus the truth of the music.
It was best to let the music
unravel and focus the truth of the night. (3)

Which world is more true -- the world of music, or the world of the moon? He writes, speaking of the totality of truth (which has chemicals to add to music and the moon): "war the constant, we the variant" (15)...

I really loved these darkly Emersonian (nature always wears the colors of the spirit) lines from "Good to Ghost":

The world is a veil.
Its effects total
the imagination. (4)

What does it mean to find beauty (the result of fierceness following its heart) in a broken world? "is there more / sadness in beauty / than beauty / in sadness" (28)? And is the same mind responsible for the world's brokenness as is the mind capable of seeing beauty "nevertheless" (4)?
Profile Image for Dominic Transilvanicus.
39 reviews
August 27, 2025
the elegy becomes the quintessential mode of communication, a collective doxology to the tragedy of existence. Gizzi's latest and very well-received poetry collection it's all about loss and the way we cope with it. It's not a personal, autobiographical collection, but one that includes each and everyone's pain as the "I" of the poems, with which the author assumes a playful stance, throwing it around like a ball, leaving the reader to mentally mask himself with it wherever, whenever it flashes.
Profile Image for Oliver Shrouder.
507 reviews10 followers
January 19, 2025
Hugely disappointing - follows a poetic style I've never really enjoyed, which is to use a high register with no anchor-point to create a dreamlike atmosphere with nothing to string the words together - disparate and floaty, and doesn't do anything for me as poetry
Profile Image for Jack Malik.
Author 20 books20 followers
January 11, 2026
I would love to give this a five star. Alas, I can’t because there were no bangers or any poems that I liked in this collection—even though there were many great lines: one even inspired me to write my own poem!

Finished this in one sitting. Flows like water. Would recommend.
410 reviews5 followers
December 1, 2024
Some good poetry here

Some of these poems worked for me and some didn't. Some of the more 'prosey' pieces in particular seemed weaker. The best of the poems were strong.
Profile Image for Andy Oram.
624 reviews30 followers
December 14, 2024
Gizzi's word choices are simple and elemental; they spurt out in short phrases as if he can't muster a complete thought. But he builds effective poems from them, "To be unleashed as a verb."
236 reviews6 followers
March 29, 2025
In a great tradition of American poets like Stevens, Williams, Creeley, and Emily Dickinson, each beat a force
59 reviews1 follower
April 18, 2025
A bit all over the pace - some strong, some weak. A few lines or verses that touch a nerve - but ultimately diluted with the majority
Profile Image for eva.
21 reviews
August 12, 2025
is there more sadness in beauty than beauty in sadness
Profile Image for Morgan.
95 reviews
December 29, 2025
I'm learning to embrace honest sentimentality - have read better nature poems though!
Profile Image for Marek Torčík.
Author 10 books176 followers
April 24, 2025
"Listening to stone translate into silence.
Here is an old rock covered with lichen
in the mossy forest inside the self.
I like it here when it's green.
This is me evolving.
I'm hanging on."

"no ideas but in wounds, I is that wound"
Author 3 books19 followers
September 26, 2023
ReallY I really like Gizzi. And I liked half of these. Not so much the long very short lines. They seem too "ethereal" breathless. "Roxy Music" and "Spooky Action" Notre Musique"" and others shined for me.

"with its slight aura, archival glamour, gas-lit corridors"
Profile Image for Emily Taylor.
107 reviews1 follower
December 16, 2025
I thought this was shit. Hot take. Still pissed he won the TS Eliot for this.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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