Detailed item info | Synopsis | Poems on such subjects as animism and Zen Buddhism from Virginia Hamilton Adair, who published her first book of poetry when she was in her 80s--the wildly successful "Ants on the Melon".
| | Size | | Length: | 109 pages | | Height: | 9.0 in. | | Width: | 6.0 in. | | Thickness: | 1.0 in. | | Weight: | 10.4 oz. |
| | Publisher's Note | Beliefs and Blasphemies exhibits the same qualities--accessibility, deep feeling, wisdom, humor, and technical brilliance--that made Virginia Hamilton Adairs first collection of poems, Ants on the Melon, into a bestseller and a literary landmark. Here Mrs. Adair devotes her attention to a single theme, religion, but in her brilliant performance the themes variations turn out to be wide and deep--from reverence to iconoclasm, from comedy to profundity, from joy to lament. If you are looking for Hallmark platitudes or E-Z faith, look elsewhere.In "Saving the Songs," for example, we reconsider Martin Luthers penchant for recycling barroom tunes into hymns: "Said Luther of the singing in saloons,/Why should the devil have the choicest tunes?" More soberly, in "The Reassem-blage," we are asked to test the extremes of the Christian version of the hereafter--"one a verdict brutal beyond imagination,/the other by most reports an eternity of boredom"--against our hearts hopes. The conclusion? "Some myths are too terrible for our believing." "Goddesses First" muses about the primacy of female deities in many religious myths. "Choosing" uses the poets virtual blindness to explain her celebration of the only distinction her "frail vision can discern": the literal difference between night and day. Zen temples and the chapel at a state mental hospital, animism and meditation, whores and angels--this curious, witty, and compassionate sensibility encompasses them all.Virginia Hamilton Adair is a uniquely American poet--restless in her lyrical investigations, hopeful and honest, rigorous in her formal accomplishments, spontaneous in her emotions. Beliefs and Blasphemies will appeal to anyone who has ever thought about first things or final things--anyone who enjoys speculating about how we got here and where were going--and it will reconfirm its author's stature as a national treasure. From the bestselling, critically lauded author of "Ants on the Melon" comes a new collection of wide-ranging and highly readable poems about religion.
| | Industry reviews | The afterword of Ants on the Melon, Adair's first collection of poems published two years ago at the age of 83 to justified acclaim hinted at a trove of equally masterful poems to be drawn on in books to come. The toughness, grace and humor of this second collection at times bear that out, but those expecting an Ants on the Melon II, with that book's broad range of subjects and moods, will be disappointed. These poems almost exclusively take up God, religion and ethics as their subjects, subjects that have produced much of the greatest poetry, but that have been somewhat neglected of late. Divided among seven sections ("Imagining a Maker"; "Yeshua"; "Mineral, Vegetable, Animal"; "Beyond" and three others), the poems quip ("God is a girl, they intoned, and if you don't believe us, no soup tonight"), question ("How could God know he was `love'/ before this voice, these eyes, told him?") and declare a provisional faith ("I have never been sure of meanings/ of sin, atonement, forgiveness"). Others use chance encounters a cabin-bound couple's brush with a gun-toting biker; a visit to a mental hospital's chapel; the discovery of a great-grandmother's "soiled scarf" to meditate on the nature of belief when put to the test. Some lean toward the transcendental ("The eagle soars, slides down air/ from heaven, giving thanks/ for wings and atmosphere") and others, without fanfare, toward death. Adair's searching verses may not always have the ring of the contemporary, and they often stop short here of fully unfurling their insights. But at its best, this collection points the way back to an American tradition of religious poetry understood and cherished by the likes of Elizabeth Bishop and Louise Bogan. Editor: Dan Menaker. (Aug.) Lopate
Two years ago, Adair made headlines by publishing her first book of verse. The unusual attention given to Ants on the Melon (LJ 4/1/96) was due as much to Adair's age 83 and her relative obscurity as to the quality of the writing: unsentimental, direct, technically accomplished. Her life story didn't hurt either: a well-educated New England professor who gave up teaching for marriage and children, she lost her historian husband to suicide in 1968 and her eyesight to glaucoma in the years that followed. Acclaim may be more measured for this second collection, whose unabashed religiosity borders on the trite: "Part of the maker dwells in all that's made:/ in crafted things, the plough, the ax, the spade,/ the everlasting flower carved in jade,/ souls of the trees that gather in the glade." Rhymed poems about God are a tough trick for any poet, but Adair's so-called blasphemies can also be corny: the prostitute who is nauseated by watching people eat "weiners," for example. But when Adair finds the right words for her stark, honest vision often using the imagery of childhood she can chill to the bone: " `Come to the playground of the dead,' we sing,/ swinging from the bar of the jungle gym./ And sooner or later, everyone comes." Ellen Kaufman, Dewey Ballantine Law Lib., New York Kakutani
|
|
Portions of this page Copyright 1995 - 2009 Muze Inc.  All rights reserved. |