Backwards Days
Stuart Dischell, . . Penguin, $16 (63pp) ISBN 978-0-14-311255-6
Blue-collar heartbreak and terse, hard-won wisdom dominate this vivid fourth outing, in which crowds of men and women try to do “the basic human thing”: Dischell’s quiet protagonists traipse riverbanks, promise to “attend/ The weddings and burials,” and mull the connections between mourning and rejoicing, hope and memory, lust and love. The clever title poem declares the poet’s affections in terms drawn from a kindergarten ritual; a surprising pantoum tells a story about “a blind girl in Paris.” Some of his best works are compressed narratives: “Tale of the Garret,” for example, updates a familiar fable in order to ask how the airy concerns of the imagination might blind us to the concrete causes for other people’s pain. Dischell (
Reviewed on: 10/15/2007
Genre: Fiction
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