Book Description
A highly original poetic debut. In the mystical tradition of Merrill and Yeats, these wry, haunting poems take the form of conversations between a woman and a throng of invisible presences -- "visitors," as she calls them -- who counsel, challenge, cajole, and comfort her. Together they murmur about destiny, sex, the moon, an abortion, a walk on park Avenue. Exploring otherness, solitude, and desire, the "visits" are quixotic debates about the nature of language, art, and one woman's particular world. "Life is so complicated for us here, " she remarks, . . . that I wondered how they found theirs. Did they love it up there cutting their spirals into cold fronts andturning somersaults with the storms? Did they nestle cozy into their troughs of air, basking in the serene and glossy heights, the breathtaking vistas of blue-gray seas, the pink-tinted cloudscapes, the high music -- Or did they, as we do, long for blanketsand warm bodies?Exquisitely paced, full of delicate banter, Visits from the Seventh is a passionate and philosophically profound collection of poems.