cover image Unreconstructed: Poems Selected and New

Unreconstructed: Poems Selected and New

, . . Autumn House, $17.95 (200pp) ISBN 978-1932870145

Often chatty, usually likable and occasionally profound, Ochester's fluent free verse also includes a remarkable range of subjects, from his own Polish immigrant heritage to “Fred Astaire,” “Retired Miners,” shopping malls, Rust Belt retirees, a baboon watching apes, “Mike's Lymphoma,” “Pasta,” “My Penis” and “empty trains,” whose chugging makes the repeated sound “Eisenhower Eisenhower Eisenhower.” Ruminations on autobiographical detail often utilize a single long sentence, its goal either deep compassion or broad comedy—or, in Ochester's best poems, both. “The Canaries in Uncle Arthur's Basement,” for example, remembers when “Aunt Lizzie was in tears/ because Arthur came home from the soccer game drunk/ and because he missed dinner brought a potted plant/ for each female relative, and walked around the table/ kissing each one.” Opposed in principle (as the title poem says) to “people [who] talk about form,” Ochester pays tribute by name to Frank O'Hara, Gerald Stern and William Stafford; his merging of heartfelt warmth with oddball detail suggests a blend of Albert Goldbarth and Stephen Dunn. This second selected (which includes the whole of his 1989 selected poems) should bring Ochester, the longtime editor of the Pitt Poetry Series, the attention his body of work deserves. (Aug.)