Dean Young (1) (1955–)
Autore di The Art of Recklessness: Poetry as Assertive Force and Contradiction
Per altri autori con il nome Dean Young, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.
Sull'Autore
Dean Young was born in 1955 in Columbia, Pennsylvania. He has received a fellowship from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, a Stegner fellowship from Stanford, and two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts. Currently an associate professor at Loyola University, he splits his mostra altro time between Chicago and Berkeley, California, where he lives with his wife, fiction writer Cornelia Nixon. mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: Courtesy of Squaw Valley Community of Writers
Opere di Dean Young
Opere correlate
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Data di nascita
- 1955-07-18
- Sesso
- male
- Nazionalità
- USA
- Luogo di nascita
- Columbia, Pennsylvania, USA
- Attività lavorative
- dichter
- Premi e riconoscimenti
- American Academy of Arts and Letters Academy Award (Literature, 2007)
Utenti
Recensioni
Premi e riconoscimenti
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 18
- Opere correlate
- 15
- Utenti
- 702
- Popolarità
- #36,077
- Voto
- 3.8
- Recensioni
- 16
- ISBN
- 48
- Preferito da
- 3
What makes this collection a bit different is that Shock by Shock is his first since he received a heart transplant. Four months in a hospital recovering.
the body
is a vessel of flame-flicker
and even in dreams I say my lover’s
name so picture me for verisimilitude
made entirely of sunflowers but keep
the long scar in the center of my chest,
under it a grim doctrine frolics
on a dissecting table. I who have been
restored by cardiac shocks, dropped
into morning wanton and struck.
“…When / you are waiting for a new heart / you are waiting for someone to die.” (”How I got Through My Last Day on the Transplant List”)
…the god
. . . likes the theater, the gowns and masks
the rib-cage splitter and ceremonial
reaching into the chest
and a stranger, a boy really,
the heart of a reckless, generous boy
lifted from its cooler
and sutured into a carnal afterlife,
rose by rose, ladder by ladder,
shock by shock by shock.
He's a master of great titles and provocative lines. From "Street of Blind Knife Throwers" (ha!), one I took to be about poets:
One thought she was a genius for putting
9 commas in a row. Do not be too quick
to embrace an alternative energy source,
let fracking be your guide. Some things
can only be found when you hide. Sometimes
it's like a fistfight to decide who's
the biggest pacifist.
One of my favorites in this collection, with another great title:
Crash Test Dummies of an Imperfect God
Because we are so stupid,
the prizes in Cracker Jacks are now paper
so they can be swallowed, ladders
spackled with warnings. No getting
within a hundred feet of Stonehenge because
everyone wants to hack off a souvenir
and the way home is clogged to one lane
so whoever wants to can stare into a pothole
until coming up with a grievance. I’d vote
the greatest accomplishment of mankind
is the pickle spear. God created paradise
to tell us Get out! which is why we probably
created God who doesn’t much like being created
by ilk like us. No wonder it’s pediatrics
every morning and toxicology by happy hour.
Is it all in the mind, the dirty, dirty mind?
Maybe God tried to turn you into a garbage can
so you could be lifted by the truck’s hydraulic
arms and banged empty. Maybe a snow cone
so you could be sticky-sweet and dropped.
Maybe a genital-faced bivalve to be dashed
with Tabasco and eaten whole or, to his glory,
produce a pearl.
* * * *
Hard not to be inspired by this guy.… (altro)