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XX

Poems for the Twentieth Century

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A poetic history of the twentieth century from one of our most beloved, popular, and highly lauded poets—a stirring, strikingly original, intensely imagined recreation of the most potent voices and searing moments that have shaped our collective experience.

XX is award-winning poet Campbell McGrath’s astonishing sequence of one hundred poems—one per year—written in a vast range of forms, and in the voices of figures as varied as Picasso and Mao, Frida Kahlo and Elvis Presley. Based on years of historical research and cultural investigation, XX turns poetry into an archival inquiry and a choral documentary. Hollywood and Hiroshima, Modernism and propaganda, Bob Dylan and Walter Benjamin—its range of interest encompasses the entire century of art and culture, invention and struggle.

Elegiac and celebratory, deeply tragic and wickedly funny, XX is a unique collection from this acknowledged master of historical poetry, and his most ambitious book yet.

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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2016

      "What lasts, what endures, as Shakespeare knew, is this:/ the story of a life." In his latest collection, MacArthur Fellow McGrath (In the Kingdom of the Sea Monkeys) gives us many stories, marching us year by year through the 20th century to tell its story by capturing an important individual or moment. Many of those represented are artists (Orson Welles claims the quote above), which deftly shows the cross-hatching of art and history; "Hearts of Darkness: Freud and Conrad (1901)" opens, "Messages from the interior: darkness & illumination,/ dreams and blood," then goes on to reference proper Vienna and colonial-era "Belgian savagery." Figures from Pablo Picasso to Chairman Mao recur, and even key artifacts such as Dupont's Fiber 66 appear. McGrath ably captures the flow of history, though sometimes it feels as if he's just getting through the facts ("The war changed me. Cambridge is a fond memory," from "Wittgenstein: Letter to Bertrand Russell (1919)." What's best are the sudden, affecting moments in the swirl of things: says Martha, the last passenger pigeon, "They are not like to treat you any kinder/ beneath a sky that echoes only the longing in their hearts." VERDICT This ambitious collection will especially satisfy those who appreciate narrative poetry. [See Prepub Alert, 12/7/15.]--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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