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somanybookstoread's review
4.0
I don't read a lot of poetry. But I saw this at the library, know I had heard of Billy Collins, and loved the title. It's a great collection. Some of them I could take or leave, but others really had me captivated and were just gorgeous, including the poem for which the collection is named.
beneduck's review
5.0
Many of these are sadder and made me more emotional than in the other BC collection ! Five goddamn stars!! What a cure for homesickness and weariness in my first week of New Zealand. My absolute favorite is Vocation. So so tasty and true. Delicious collection. I hope to keep this w me and lend it to Ruth so we can continue our devout worship of BC.
(I just read some of the other reviews for this one and Yeesh!!! Lots of haters!)
(I just read some of the other reviews for this one and Yeesh!!! Lots of haters!)
toniclark's review
3.0
On page 27. I took a nap and, when I woke, noticed that I'd been dreaming in Billy-speak. . . .
There are several good poems here. Much to admire for sure. And there are some not-so-good poems here. Scratch head. Turn page. It makes you wonder if everything he writes, good or bad, goes into the book.
He's self-deprecating and likable, witty, and sometimes humorous. But sometimes I feel as though the attempts at humor are strained or stretched too thin. Collins always seems to be caught up in a daydream, as if he has no particular work to do, place to go. He can idly muse about taking dead people (whose names he glimpses on headstones) for a ride on his copper-colored bicycle or make a sort of duck out of his hand and talk nonsense to it. There's no one listening, after all. Except we are. And sometimes I wish he actually had something more to say.
One of my favorite poems here was the first one in the book.
Grave
What do you think of my new glasses
I asked as I stood under a shade tree
before the joined grave of my parents,
and what followed was a long silence
that descended on the rows of the dead
and on the fields and the woods beyond,
one of the one hundred kinds of silence
according to the Chinese belief,
each one distinct from the others,
but the differences being so faint
that only a few special monks
were able to tell one from another.
They make you look very scholarly,
I heard my mother say
once I lay down on the ground
and pressed an ear into the soft grass.
Then I rolled over and pressed
my other ear to the ground,
the ear my father likes to speak into,
but he would say nothing,
and I could not find a silence
among the one hundred Chinese silences
that would fit the one that he created
even though I was the one
who had just made up the business
of the one hundred Chinese silences—
the Silence of the Night Boat,
and the Silence of the Lotus,
cousin to the Silence of the Temple Bell
only deeper and softer, like petals, at its farthest edges.
(Published in The Atlantic)
Then there's "Feedback."
The woman who wrote from Phoenix
after my reading there
to tell me they were still talking about it
just wrote again
to tell me that they had stopped.
To be fair, here's an example of one I just think is bad. So you can decide for yourself.
Night and Day
Funny how that works,
the breathing all day then it continuing
into the night
when I am absent from the company of the wakeful
oblivious even to the bedroom windows
and the ghost dance of the curtains
but still breathing
and turning in bed
pulling the covers tight around me
maybe caught in the irons of a dream
like that one about the birds, but
more like an evil society of birds
a kind of neighborhood watch group
throwing a block party
with the usual balloons and folding chairs
and tables covered with covered dishes
and many children running
in circles or jagged lines
only everyone with bird heads, bigger than life,
even the children with bird heads
and yes, you guessed it
the birds up in the trees
have little human faces
and they are all talking amongst themselves
about the cloudy weather
and the bushes laden with berries
as if none of it were the least bit funny.
(Published in Knockout)
Or how about:
My Hero
Just as the hare is zipping across the finish line,
the tortoise has stopped once again
by the roadside,
this time to stick out his neck
and nibble a bit of sweet grass,
unlike the previous time
when he was distracted
by a bee humming in the heart of a wildflower.
(Published in Superstition Review)
Yes, we know that Collins sees himself, or wants to portray himself, as the tortoise, taking his own sweet time to nibble the grass and smell the flowers along the way. Can't deny that there's something to be said for that. Not sure it's enough to warrant poem after poem.
Fine as light fare. Folksy. Just the thing for those people who like to brag that they don't really read poetry, but this is the kind of poetry they like.
And I really do like Collins. Yes, really. But there are collections I liked better than this one.
There are several good poems here. Much to admire for sure. And there are some not-so-good poems here. Scratch head. Turn page. It makes you wonder if everything he writes, good or bad, goes into the book.
He's self-deprecating and likable, witty, and sometimes humorous. But sometimes I feel as though the attempts at humor are strained or stretched too thin. Collins always seems to be caught up in a daydream, as if he has no particular work to do, place to go. He can idly muse about taking dead people (whose names he glimpses on headstones) for a ride on his copper-colored bicycle or make a sort of duck out of his hand and talk nonsense to it. There's no one listening, after all. Except we are. And sometimes I wish he actually had something more to say.
One of my favorite poems here was the first one in the book.
Grave
What do you think of my new glasses
I asked as I stood under a shade tree
before the joined grave of my parents,
and what followed was a long silence
that descended on the rows of the dead
and on the fields and the woods beyond,
one of the one hundred kinds of silence
according to the Chinese belief,
each one distinct from the others,
but the differences being so faint
that only a few special monks
were able to tell one from another.
They make you look very scholarly,
I heard my mother say
once I lay down on the ground
and pressed an ear into the soft grass.
Then I rolled over and pressed
my other ear to the ground,
the ear my father likes to speak into,
but he would say nothing,
and I could not find a silence
among the one hundred Chinese silences
that would fit the one that he created
even though I was the one
who had just made up the business
of the one hundred Chinese silences—
the Silence of the Night Boat,
and the Silence of the Lotus,
cousin to the Silence of the Temple Bell
only deeper and softer, like petals, at its farthest edges.
(Published in The Atlantic)
Then there's "Feedback."
The woman who wrote from Phoenix
after my reading there
to tell me they were still talking about it
just wrote again
to tell me that they had stopped.
To be fair, here's an example of one I just think is bad. So you can decide for yourself.
Night and Day
Funny how that works,
the breathing all day then it continuing
into the night
when I am absent from the company of the wakeful
oblivious even to the bedroom windows
and the ghost dance of the curtains
but still breathing
and turning in bed
pulling the covers tight around me
maybe caught in the irons of a dream
like that one about the birds, but
more like an evil society of birds
a kind of neighborhood watch group
throwing a block party
with the usual balloons and folding chairs
and tables covered with covered dishes
and many children running
in circles or jagged lines
only everyone with bird heads, bigger than life,
even the children with bird heads
and yes, you guessed it
the birds up in the trees
have little human faces
and they are all talking amongst themselves
about the cloudy weather
and the bushes laden with berries
as if none of it were the least bit funny.
(Published in Knockout)
Or how about:
My Hero
Just as the hare is zipping across the finish line,
the tortoise has stopped once again
by the roadside,
this time to stick out his neck
and nibble a bit of sweet grass,
unlike the previous time
when he was distracted
by a bee humming in the heart of a wildflower.
(Published in Superstition Review)
Yes, we know that Collins sees himself, or wants to portray himself, as the tortoise, taking his own sweet time to nibble the grass and smell the flowers along the way. Can't deny that there's something to be said for that. Not sure it's enough to warrant poem after poem.
Fine as light fare. Folksy. Just the thing for those people who like to brag that they don't really read poetry, but this is the kind of poetry they like.
And I really do like Collins. Yes, really. But there are collections I liked better than this one.
heregrim's review
2.0
Disclaimer: I am not a huge fan of poetry. I find it should be a spoken art and often when written is too abstract for me to find time to care. That said in section one The Snag and the seeking of time spent with a lost grandfather was moving. In part two, it is Girl and the aging of a girl into a young woman that spoke strongest to me. By part three I am getting bored of the book, but both The Hangover and The Chairs No One Sits In talked of my life as it currently is.
annvalentine's review
4.0
I'm dipping my toes back into poetry, and this was a nice place to start. Accessible, humorous, and focused on the mundane in the way I love. and ya girl loves memento mori themes
expatally's review
4.0
I struggle when reading poetry. It's definitely not a genre I choose very often, but I Billy Collins' work feels more accessible.
matthewwester's review
2.0
This has been my least favorite Collins book. It lacked some of the profound residue I enjoyed in his other books. That is my personal opinion on this one, anyway, sorry. :-(