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    2.26.2008

    Late Fees?



    A couple of days after arriving at York, I went with Brad and John to the public library. The only necessity of our trip was to procure a library card for local discounts and such, but of course we also managed to pick up a truckload of books. Now, I'm pretty proud that I've managed to actually finish more than half of them, and have spent a little time with each and ever one. That's pretty good for me. But, the due date is already past and thus I am forced to return them before I would like. Here's a record of their life with me, though, before they're returned to the shelves. Who knows if anyone else will spend time with them or love them ever again?

    C.K. Stead - "The New Poetic"
    - an analysis of British poetry from early Yeats through the Georgians and War Poets up to Eliot's "Four Quartets," this influential book/essay uses a very potent model for tracking the relationships between poet, audience, and subject matter and ends up arriving at the central discussion of what poetry is and does

    Czeslaw Milosz - "Facing the River"
    - I finally found an actual collection of Milosz's poems and was greatly rewarded; I would highly recommend this dark but fertile revelation of Milosz's mind and life, one of his last

    Billy Collins - "Nine Horses" and "Taking Off Emily Dickinson's Clothes"
    - more clever, quirky, occasionally moving, but above all casual poetry from this laid-back master of easy-going poems

    Samuel Beckett - "For To End Yet Again and Other Fizzles"
    - inciting mind/word-play akin to James Joyce; an intriguing experimental form (or poetry?) but not sustainable beyond the few pages of each individual fizzle

    Seamus Heaney - "District and Circle"
    - I enjoyed his direct engagement with other writers and his impressive lexicon--an expansive mix of local-feeling Anglo-Saxon words littered like rocks or peat amongst international landscape of bamboo and Italian architecture--but overall, I had trouble engaging the poems

    Ezra Pound - "Poems selected by Thom Gunn"
    - I read Gunn's brief introduction and a few excerpts--I'm still not sure what I think of Pound, beyond the obligatory nod for his midwifery role in Modernist poetry

    Luigi Pirandello - "Collected Plays"
    - again, the introduction was informative, but I didn't have time to actually read any of the actual plays

    Deitrich Bonhoffer - "Ethics"
    - I glanced over the section on Vocation and on Government, only to be slightly disappointed. maybe someday I'll be able to engage the whole book, since he himself considered it such an important undertaking

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