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Totem (APR Honickman 1st Book Prize) |  | Author: Gregory Pardlo Publisher: American Poetry Review Category: Book
List Price: $14.00 Buy New: $5.88 as of 11/21/2009 07:23 MST details You Save: $8.12 (58%)
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Seller: Fantastic Prices Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 1301355
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Pages: 96 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 0.4 x 0.2
ISBN: 0977639533 Dewey Decimal Number: 811 EAN: 9780977639533 ASIN: 0977639533
Publication Date: September 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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"Gregory Pardlo . . . wants to explore the druidic function of art, the works of jazz musicians, painters, poets, and others who live imaginatively, expand reality, and make imagination free."-Brenda Hillman, from the introduction Totem, winner of the APR/Honickman First Book Prize, is the debut of a poet who has been listening for decades. In his youth, Gregory Pardlo heard stories of factory hours and picket lines from his father; in the bars, clubs, and on the radio he listens to jazz and blues, the rhythms, beats, and aspirations of which all of which seep into his poems. A former Cave Canem fellow, Pardlo creates work that is deeply autobiographical, drifting between childhood and adult life. He speaks a language simultaneously urban and highbrow, seamlessly switching from art analysis to sneakers hung over the telephone lines. Deeply rooted in a blue-collar world, he produces snapshots of a life that is so specific it becomes universal. From "Vincent's Shoes": On the wall above my desk: a pen and ink affair which I copied from a print hanging in the sushi bar down the block: inflected necks of pedestrians on a bridge in the rain and here I hung the hightops from a power line. It was in me to do. I felt it in my gut the way Vincent might have felt the wheat fields and the smoking socket of the sun rattling, tweezed days late into the ear of an aluminum bowl Gregory Pardlo teaches at Medgar Evers College, The City University of New York, and lives in Brooklyn.
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| Customer Reviews: Stunning March 14, 2008 Tabitha G. Lewis 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I was fortunate enough to meet Gregory Pardlo tonight at a reading at the College of St.Rose in Albany, NY. He is as personable as he is brilliant. His smooth melodic voice will resonate for me as I read the rest of his pieces from Totem. I couldn't resist the purchase after hearing him aloud this evening. I literally shook my head in wonder and my jaw dropped in awe after his poem "Double Dutch." If you purchase this, which you definately should--if you enjoy poetry and all things literarily devine--go straight to page 36. Enough good things can not be said about this book!
encompassing poems by African American teacher at CUNY January 7, 2008 Henry Berry (Southport, CT) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Pardlo has an inimitable style, language--he cannot be classified. Not that any genuine poet can--but Pardlo for example would be particularly difficult to parody. Brenda Hillman in her Introduction tries to cast a net over him: "[Pardlo's] work brings together philosophical musings, abstract thought, rhetorical heightened diction, odd metaphors, and intense emotional utterance".
For this African American poet presently teaching at CUNY, the title "Totem" is "a word, an idea, a figure [of] two syllables [emblematic] of the poet's spiritual origins. It also connotes a shared guardian nature a family might hold in common; it is a symbol that draws the individual into collective consciousness." [also from Hillman's Preface] In Pardlo's more complex poems, one does find the dualisms of struggle and surrender, conflict and serenity, concern and hope, wandering and revelation.
"What odds/do those birds stand to chances anyway?/Prevention is akin to greed. Say recovery/and a sermon salts the air.../Jersey's domed capitol looks like a junkyard/of Church bells/a reliquary of Sundays/wracked and laid to rest...Another prays the next wet pebble/be the one that makes a beach./Paydirt. We should be so lucky." [from Atlantic City Sunday Morning] The heterogeneity of objects, images, and language of Pardlo's poems is more than inventory, discursiveness, or observation. He sees the earth will be redeemed in its entirety or not at all.
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