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   Book Info

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School of the Arts: Poems  
Author: Mark Doty
ISBN: 0060752459
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
Doty's vivid, inviting, descriptive verse, his celebrations of gay men's sexuality, and his heartfelt, skillful elegies, many of them in response to the HIV crisis, were '90s mainstays. Though he begins this consistently moving seventh collection with poems about famous friends (Stanley Kunitz, the novelist Michael Cunningham), Doty soon reveals the book's major subjects: paintings and painters, life in New York City, aging bodies (his own and others') and the last years or months of Arden, his beloved dog. "Paintings of dying things," Doty remarks, show how "Flesh fails and failure/ is visited upon it"; "the principal beauty of New York lies/ in human faces," though the poet also finds it in sunflowers, in a lost tropical bird, in a darkened bar. Doty has also penned two memoirs (Heaven's Coast; Firebird), and many poems stay close to incidents in his own life; contrasts between day and night (or artists' versions of both), between an imagined heaven and an observed earth, also give the volume a clear structure. "You aren't supposed/ to talk about beauty, are you?" "The Pink Poppy" asks, though it is Doty's choice, and sometimes his triumph, that he talks about it anyway. (Apr.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
If the expression of an artist's personal search for truth can manifest as a discovery process for the reader, Doty, a highly regarded writer with six poetry collections and three creative nonfiction works to his name, has mastered that approach and more. Here Doty presents poems that intertwine feeling and intellect through the symbolism of the everyday world. Whether observing the futile action of his old dog trying to climb a flight of stairs or recording the changes in a beloved Cape Cod town, Doty notices the physicality of time and place while connecting his observations to universal questions, longings, truths. Although this collection may be the sparsest yet in terms of word use, the poems are ever more sophisticated in their structure. Doty's writing continues to evolve. Rather than sticking with the voice that made him successful, he pushes the boundaries of thought and form, always searching and considering and never wavering in his attempt to not only understand the world but determine the best way to "be" in it. Janet St. John
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Alan Shapiro
"Memorable, essential, big hearted, joyous in music ... this is the finest book of poems by one of our finest poets."

Ilya Kaminsky, Library Journal, starred review
"Achieve[s] a quiet grandeur with a voice marked by the clarity and thoughtful lyricism that distinguished his earlier collections."

Publishers Weekly
"Vivid, inviting, descriptive verse."

Book Description

The darkly graceful poems in Mark Doty's seventh collection explore the ways in which we are educated by the implacable powers of time and desire. The world constantly renews itself, and the new brings both possibility and erasure. Given the limits of our own bodies, how are we to live within the inevitability of despair?

This is the plainest of Doty's books, its language stripped and humbled. But whatever depths are sounded in these poems, their humane and open music sustains. Art itself instructs us. Lucian Freud's startling renditions of human skin, Virginia Woolf's ecstatic depiction of consciousness, Caravaggio's only-too-real people elevated to difficult glory -- all turn the light of human intelligence upon "the night of time."

Formally inventive, warm, at once witty and disconsolate, School of the Arts represents a poet reinventing his own voice at midlife, finding a way through a troubled passage. Acutely attentive, insistently alive, this is a book of "fierce vulnerability."




School of the Arts: Poems

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The darkly graceful poems in Mark Doty's seventh collection explore the ways in which we are educated by the implacable powers of time and desire. The world constantly renews itself, and the new brings both possibility and erasure. Given the limits of our own bodies, how are we to live within the inevitability of despair?

This is the plainest of Doty's books, its language stripped and humbled. But whatever depths are sounded in these poems, their humane and open music sustains. Art itself instructs us. Lucian Freud's startling renditions of human skin, Virginia Woolf's ecstatic depiction of consciousness, Caravaggio's only-too-real people elevated to difficult glory -- all turn the light of human intelligence upon "the night of time."

Formally inventive, warm, at once witty and disconsolate, School of the Arts represents a poet reinventing his own voice at midlife, finding a way through a troubled passage. Acutely attentive, insistently alive, this is a book of "fierce vulnerability."

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Doty's vivid, inviting, descriptive verse, his celebrations of gay men's sexuality, and his heartfelt, skillful elegies, many of them in response to the HIV crisis, were '90s mainstays. Though he begins this consistently moving seventh collection with poems about famous friends (Stanley Kunitz, the novelist Michael Cunningham), Doty soon reveals the book's major subjects: paintings and painters, life in New York City, aging bodies (his own and others') and the last years or months of Arden, his beloved dog. "Paintings of dying things," Doty remarks, show how "Flesh fails and failure/ is visited upon it"; "the principal beauty of New York lies/ in human faces," though the poet also finds it in sunflowers, in a lost tropical bird, in a darkened bar. Doty has also penned two memoirs (Heaven's Coast; Firebird), and many poems stay close to incidents in his own life; contrasts between day and night (or artists' versions of both), between an imagined heaven and an observed earth, also give the volume a clear structure. "You aren't supposed/ to talk about beauty, are you?" "The Pink Poppy" asks, though it is Doty's choice, and sometimes his triumph, that he talks about it anyway. (Apr.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

The poetic education in this new collection from the award-winning Doty (Still Life with Oysters and Lemon) begins with the lessons he learned from others such as Stanley Kunitz and painter Helen Miranda Wilson, who taught that "heaven/ would be complete immersion/ in physical process participation in being, say,/ diesel fuel, the impatience of trucks/ on August pavement." Doty shares other lessons, such as showing what W.H. Auden called "an affirming flame" while staying completely immersed in the world. This allows Doty to achieve a quiet grandeur with a voice marked by the clarity and thoughtful lyricism that distinguished his earlier collections. Doty's gift for abstractions remains strong-beauty, for instance, is a "hook that pulls us out of time." Yet he breaks new ground here with some formal pieces. The book is filled with daily activities, neighbors, friends, and, surprisingly, a great many dogs, featured in poems that combine high and low styles to wonderful effect: "Today I am herding the two old dogs/ into the back of the car And as I go to praise them,/ the words/ that come from my mouth,/ from nowhere, are Time's children." Recommended for all poetry collections.-Ilya Kaminsky, writer in residence, Phillips Exeter Acad., NH Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

     



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