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75 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2010
Keep This to YourselfA closer reading of the book reveals a beautiful heart in the poetry and lets you know it isn't as phoned-in as originally seemed (or as this review is [for more of the subject, see review below]). While Simic often looks back at the war of his childhood that chased his family from Europe, in this collection we see him look about the war raging in his adulthood over in the Middle East, and occasionally a blend of the two to allow them to comment on one another. Or sometimes it is a universal message, such as soldiers never returning to their families, where it is irrelevant which war is being discussed because it is all war, all bloodshed, all sadness coming 'Out of a bad dream's / smoldering ruins'. Simic hits hard here, and really drives the collection towards wonderful heights.
There are country roads now that are empty.
They'll hold on to the light of the day
A bit longer, mindful some boy
May be heading home after a game.
Whoever he is, he'll have to hurry.
This lovely moment won't last long.
The road before him lies white
Here and there under the dark trees,
As if some mad girl in the neighborhood
Had emptied her linen closet
and had been spreading her things
Over the soft late-summer dust.
The only home you and I ever had.What do you think of that one? Or take "Darkened Chessboard."
No bigger than a matchbox--
Or else as vast as the sky full of stars--
With you as the sole tenant
Grateful for a flea bite to scratch
As you sit recalling the night
Someone knocked on your door.
You were afraid to open, but when you did,
There she was asking to borrow a candle.
You told her you didn't have one.
The two of you stood face to face
Between two dark apartments
Unable to think of anything else to say
Before turning your backs on each other.
With the night already fallen,If they were all as good as these two poems, I'd have nothing to complain about.
It's hard to see who is playing,
Who is watching the game
At the little table in the park
Where no one says a word,
Engrossed as they are in the next move.
Their dinners are getting cold.
The wives they left behind
Are worrying themselves sick
While they dither there
On the lookout for the white queen
Last seen snatching a black pawn.
It was such a sad story, it made everyone laugh.
-- "Nancy Jane"
Our late friend hated blue skies,
Bible-quoting preachers,
Politicians kissing babies,
Women who are all sweetness.
He liked drunks in church,
Nudists playing volleyball,
Stray dogs making friends,
Birds singing of fair weather as they crap.
-- "Graveside Oration"