Nightworks

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2003-01-01
Publisher(s): Copper Canyon Pr
List Price: $19.26

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Summary

Marvin Bell is at the peak of his formidable powers. Long recognized as one of America's liveliest poetic in-novators, he has said in a recent interview, "I want to do something beyond convention, beyond accepted levels of skill, beyond the expected, beyond the predictable, beyond the wholly welcome." Nightworks is truly beyond the usual fare, and critics have praised it as "a major event," "long overdue,"and "essential." As the definitive collection of Bell's 40-year career, it combines new poems with choice selections from all of his previous books, including the now-infamous voice of the Dead Man: I am the poet of skulls without why or wherefore. I didn't ask to be this or that, one way or another, just a young man of words. Words that grew in sandy soil, words that fit scrub trees and beach grass. Sentenced to work alone where there is often no one to talk to. The poetry of skulls demands complicity of the reader, that the reader put words in the skull's mouth. The reader must put water and beer in the mouth, and music in the ears, and fan the air for aromas to enter the nostrils. The reader must take these lost heads to hearta_ -from "Skulls" "Marvin Bell's career has been substantial [and] Nightworks reminds us just how distinctive his voice has been all along-how prophetic, how candid, how rigorously philosophical. He enlarges our understanding of what poetry can do."-The Georgia Review Marvin Bell has taught for nearly 40 years at the Iowa Writers' Workshop. He is the first and current Poet Laureate of Iowa.

Author Biography

Marvin Bell is one of American poetry's true innovators. Over the last forty years he has published fifteen books of poetry

Table of Contents

New Poems
Sounds of the Resurrected Dead Man's Footsteps
Baby Hamlet/The Play Within the Play
3(1)
Skulls/Skulls
4(2)
Beast, Peach and Dance/Angel, Portrait and Breath
6(2)
Indeterminate Time/Yes and No
8(1)
Fly, Fleece and Tractor/Syringe, Cloak and Elevator
9(1)
A Tree in a Window, the Window Itself, and the Mustard-Colored Butter Substitute That Might Be the Sun/Coos Bay
10(2)
Odysseus/Inconsolable Love
12(2)
His Knickers, His High Shoes/His Windbreaker, His Watch Cap
14(1)
Exquisite Disembodiment/Apotheosis and Separation
15(1)
Dog, Bell and Blossom/Kneecap, Whiskey and Glass
16(2)
Passion/Consolation
18(2)
Today, Tibet/Tomorrow, Tibet
20(2)
That Swine Are Intelligent/That Ducks Are Dumb
22(1)
Lives of the Whales/Old Whalers Church, Sag Harbor
23(1)
Man Burning a Field/Vertigo
24(1)
Oneself/One's Other Self
25(1)
At the Walking Dunes, Eastern Long Island/Walking in the Drowning Forest
26(2)
One Potato Two/Three Potato Four
28(1)
Griddle, Grease and Piecrust/Oboe, Drum and Pocket Trumpet
29(2)
Shakespeare Expected/Shakespeare Dismissed
31(2)
Less Judgment/Less Self
33(240)
from Things We Dreamt We Died For [1966]
The Hole in the Sea
37(2)
Treetops
39(1)
What Songs the Soldiers Sang
40(1)
Things We Dreamt We Died For
41(1)
The Condition
42(1)
My Hate
43(1)
The Admission
44(1)
Walking Thoughts
45(1)
The Israeli Navy
46(3)
from A Probable Volume of Dreams [1969]
Give Back, Give Back
49(1)
The Parents of Psychotic Children
50(1)
A Picture of Soldiers
51(1)
The Extermination of the Jews
52(1)
Water, Winter, Fire
53(1)
Our Subject Death
54(3)
from The Escape into You [1971]
A Biography
57(1)
I Adore You (1960)
58(1)
Honi Soit Qui Mal Y Pense
59(1)
Rescue, Rescue
60(1)
Your Shakespeare
61(1)
We Have Known
62(1)
American Poets
63(1)
Song of Social Despair
64(1)
Getting Lost in Nazi Germany
65(1)
Our Romance
66(1)
Obsessive
67(1)
The Answer
68(1)
What Lasts
69(1)
Constant Feelings
70(1)
The Willing
71(1)
Put Back the Dark
72(1)
Song: The Organic Years
73(4)
from Residue of Song [1974]
Study of the Letter A
77(1)
Aristotle
78(1)
Origin of Dreams
79(1)
Father and Russia
80(1)
Garlic
81(1)
Trying to Catch Fire
82(1)
You Would Know
83(1)
Little Father Poem
84(1)
Temper
85(4)
from Stars Which See, Stars Which Do Not See [1977]
The Self and the Mulberry
89(1)
Unable to Wake in the Heat
90(1)
The Mystery of Emily Dickinson
91(1)
Trinket
92(1)
The Wild Cherry Tree Out Back
93(1)
Two Pictures of a Leaf
94(1)
Stars Which See, Stars Which Do Not See
95(1)
To No One In Particular
96(2)
Written During Depression: How to Be Happy
98(1)
``Gradually, It Occurs to Us...''
99(1)
What Is There
100(1)
Dew at the Edge of a Leaf
101(1)
By Different Paths
102(1)
An Introduction to My Anthology
103(1)
Watching the Bomber Pass Over
104(1)
To Dorothy
105(1)
Gemwood
106(5)
from These Green-Going-to-Yellow [1981]
He Said To
111(1)
We Had Seen a Pig
112(2)
The Canal at Rye
114(2)
The Last Thing I Say
116(1)
To an Adolescent Weeping Willow
117(2)
These Green-Going-to-Yellow
119(2)
A Motor
121(6)
from Drawn by Stones, by Earth, by Things That Have Been in the Fire [1984]
White Clover
127(1)
Unless It Was Courage
128(1)
Jane Was With Me
129(2)
Drawn by Stones, by Earth, by Things That Have Been in the Fire
131(1)
Starfish
132(2)
Felt but Not Touched
134(1)
Trees As Standing for Something
135(1)
Instructions to Be Left Behind
136(2)
The Nest
138(2)
The Facts of Life
140(1)
Days of Time
141(1)
One of the Animals
142(1)
The Stones
143(2)
Personal Reasons
145(4)
from New and Selected Poems [1987]
Wednesday
149(1)
Long Island
150(2)
Replica
152(2)
The Politics of an Object
154(1)
Classified
155(1)
The Pill
156(2)
In My Nature: 3 Corrective Dialogues
158(4)
After a Line by Theodore Roethke
162(3)
from Iris of Creation [1990]
He Had a Good Year
165(1)
An Old Trembling
166(1)
Nature
167(1)
Comb and Rake
168(1)
A Man May Change
169(1)
3 Horses Facing the Saskatchewan Sun
170(1)
How He Grew Up
171(1)
I, or Someone Like Me
172(1)
Portrait
173(2)
Tall Ships
175(1)
An Elegy for the Past
176(1)
I Will Not Be Claimed
177(1)
By the Iowa
178(1)
Dark Brow
179(1)
A Primer About the Flag
180(1)
Icarus Thought
181(1)
Washing Our Hands of the Rest of America
182(1)
If I Had One Thing to Say
183(1)
Sevens (Version 3): In the Closed Iris of Creation
184(3)
Darts
187(1)
Victim of Himself
188(1)
Poem After Carlos Drummond de Andrade
189(2)
Initial Conditions
191(14)
from A Marvin Bell Reader [1994]
Ecstasy
205(4)
Short Version of Ecstasy
209(1)
Cryptic Version of Ecstasy
210(1)
Eastern Long Island
211(2)
Poem in Orange Tones
213(2)
Interview
215(1)
The Uniform
216(1)
Ending with a Line from Lear
217(4)
from The Book of the Dead Man [1994]
About the Dead Man
221(2)
About the Beginnings of the Dead Man
223(2)
About the Dead Man's Speech
225(2)
About the Dead Man and Medusa
227(2)
About the Dead Man and Thunder
229(2)
About the Dead Man and Government
231(2)
About the Dead Man and Rigor Mortis
233(2)
About the Dead Man and Winter
235(2)
About the Dead Man's Happiness
237(2)
About the Dead Man and His Masks
239(2)
About the Dead Man and Sex
241(2)
About the Dead Man's Late Nights
243(4)
from Ardor: The Book of the Dead Man, Vol. 2 [1997]
About the Dead Man, Ashes and Dust
247(2)
About the Dead Man and Childhood
249(2)
About the Dead Man's Not Telling
251(2)
About the Dead Man and Desire
253(2)
Toaster, Kettle and Breadboard
255(2)
About the Dead Man and the Corpse of Yugoslavia
257(2)
About the Dead Man Outside
259(2)
About the Dead Man Apart
261(2)
About the Dead Man and Anyway
263(2)
About the Dead Man and Sense
265(2)
About the Dead Man and Everpresence
267(2)
Accounts of the Dead Man
269(4)
Index of Titles 273(3)
Index of First Lines 276

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