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I.
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A masterful long poem from one of our great American poets.
Gerald Stern’s long poem I. is an extraordinary and wild compilation of poetic modes, moods, and registers—meandering and focused, halluc...
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13 December 2022

A masterful long poem from one of our great American poets.
Gerald Stern’s long poem I. is an extraordinary and wild compilation of poetic modes, moods, and registers—meandering and focused, hallucinatory and concrete, deranged and deeply ecstatic. Inspired by the sight of a derelict synagogue on the Lower East Side, I. is an intrinsically New York poem, concerned with shifting structures of place and identity in the face of time and rapid change. Though first written in the late aughts, Stern’s brazen, mischievous politicality and blasphemous spirituality, refracted through the biblical book and prophetic character of Isaiah, feel particularly relevant to the present moment. Intertextual, critical, at times jubilant and derisive, I. brims with Stern’s idiosyncratic mix of high intellect and chthonic populism.
The book features Stern’s original introduction, as well as a foreword and afterword written by poet-luminaries Ross Gay and Alicia Ostriker.
Gerald Stern’s long poem I. is an extraordinary and wild compilation of poetic modes, moods, and registers—meandering and focused, hallucinatory and concrete, deranged and deeply ecstatic. Inspired by the sight of a derelict synagogue on the Lower East Side, I. is an intrinsically New York poem, concerned with shifting structures of place and identity in the face of time and rapid change. Though first written in the late aughts, Stern’s brazen, mischievous politicality and blasphemous spirituality, refracted through the biblical book and prophetic character of Isaiah, feel particularly relevant to the present moment. Intertextual, critical, at times jubilant and derisive, I. brims with Stern’s idiosyncratic mix of high intellect and chthonic populism.
The book features Stern’s original introduction, as well as a foreword and afterword written by poet-luminaries Ross Gay and Alicia Ostriker.
Price: $9.99
Pages: 114
Publisher: Ayin Press
Imprint: Ayin Press
Publication Date:
13 December 2022
ISBN: 9798986780382
Format: eBook
BISACs:
POETRY / Jewish, Poetry by individual poets, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Places, POETRY / American / General
“I. is vintage Gerald Stern, and it epitomizes his glorious career. ‘A continuation . . . a crazy footnote . . . a weird midrash’—that’s the Jewish poetry that has always mattered and what this truly (look it up) berserk and tender prophecy brings us so movingly now. All hail Stern’s I, period!”
—Peter Cole, author of Draw Me After: Poems“I. is a book-length vortex. From various locales on New York’s Lower East Side, the poet, I mean I., reflects on the likes of Abraham, Dickinson, Cervantes, Fats Waller. He considers words such as ‘pelican,’ he conjures crimes such as oil spills, he mentions a ‘room for affection,’ he brings up the ‘pellucid distinctness of objects’ and cites passages, so to speak, in Exodus. I. investigates and observes. And, as with much of Stern's poetry, observation is both profane and sacred. Within a tumult of images from God-knows-where and language that upsets both the cart and carter, I. beckons. Stern delivers.”
—Kimiko Hahn, author of Foreign Bodies
—Peter Cole, author of Draw Me After: Poems“I. is a book-length vortex. From various locales on New York’s Lower East Side, the poet, I mean I., reflects on the likes of Abraham, Dickinson, Cervantes, Fats Waller. He considers words such as ‘pelican,’ he conjures crimes such as oil spills, he mentions a ‘room for affection,’ he brings up the ‘pellucid distinctness of objects’ and cites passages, so to speak, in Exodus. I. investigates and observes. And, as with much of Stern's poetry, observation is both profane and sacred. Within a tumult of images from God-knows-where and language that upsets both the cart and carter, I. beckons. Stern delivers.”
—Kimiko Hahn, author of Foreign Bodies