Description

Book Synopsis

William Logan’s poetry has been called elegant, difficult, cranky, formidable, dazzling, intoxicating, and ominous. For almost forty years, he has published poems that do not fit comfortably with the work of most of his contemporaries, and perhaps do not want to fit at all. The poems in Deception Island, a selection from his first five books, find their souls in the soullessness of modern life – if he looks upon the present with a withering eye, he sees the roots of later darkness in the early sins of culture. He might be called a moral poet, if he were not so suspicious of the certainties of morality. Nonetheless, he takes a resistant pleasure in the Byzantine contrivance of Venice, in the empty vision of the American west, and in the romantic longing of British landscape. He is equally at home in the privileges of free verse and in the older metrical line, sometimes roughened into sensibility, and rarely heard now with such command or control. Logan has an impeccable ear, a darkening view, and a belief that the poet’s job is to work in language, to do things with words, without attempting to persuade or forgive. In his poems, the echoes of Lowell, Auden, and other modern masters can sometimes be heard; but he has fused his influences into a poetic line that is personal in the private wrestling with language that the poet must accept as his task.



Trade Review

Sad-faced Men (1982): Logan writes like an angel – an elegant, literary angel.

-- Donald Hall * Iowa Review *

‘The most hated man in American poetry,’ a title one could be proud of in this time of fawning and favor-trading.

-- Robert McDowell * Hudson Review *

The unloveliness of some of the feelings to which Logan gives vent is refreshing, a counter to the melancholy transcendentalism of many of his contemporaries. He takes America personally. . . . Logan’s are never going to be the Nation’s Favourite Poems, but their presence reminds us of what poetry can include.

-- Sean O’Brien * Times Literary Supplement *

Macbeth in Venice (2003): A construct of elegant thematic and formal irony…Logan’s strengths are those of a learned poet – a confident grasp of formal and thematic resource, an archivist’s love of the past and an impassioned concern for tradition.

-- J. T. Barbarese * New York Times Book Review *

The Whispering Gallery (2005): In a very different vein, that scrupulous and at times ironic austerity distinguishes William Logan's new collection of poems, The Whispering Gallery. Its feelings are under pressure of exactitude and clarity. The flashes of humour are all the more telling.

-- George Steiner * Times Literary Supplement *

William Logan’s work has frequently elicited comparison with W. H. Auden and Robert Lowell, and for good reason.

-- James Matthew Wilson * Notre Dame Review *

Strange Flesh (2008): A hard-boiled formalist with a redoubtable aptitude for tersely fastidious diction and sinewy prosody whipped into fighting trim. . . . He can hold his own with just about anyone in vivisecting the vanity of human wishes with savage aplomb.

-- David Barber * New York Times Book Review *

Table of Contents
  • Contents
  • from Sad-faced Men
  • Deception Island
  • The Object
  • Observing Whales through Binoculars
  • Seventy-Six
  • Two Lives
  • Travel Report
  • Ice
  • The Man on the Bed
  • The Mantis
  • A Portrait by Bellocq
  • Tatiana Kalatschova
  • The Lizard in His Medium
  • from Difficulty
  • Clare and Silence
  • Arcanum
  • The Angels among the Liars
  • Money and Dürer
  • Black Harbor
  • Summer Island
  • Blue Yacht
  • Travel
  • Folly
  • Green Island
  • The King of Black Pudding
  • Flour Mites as Moral Beings
  • This Island
  • from Sullen Weedy Lakes
  • Moorhen
  • Capability Brown in the Tropics
  • The Rivers of England
  • Banana Republics
  • Debora Sleeping
  • Christ Church, Oxford / 26 October 1881
  • 3-13 September 1752
  • The Underground
  • Racial Prejudice in Imperial Rome
  • Major Graves
  • To the Honourable Committee
  • James at Sixty
  • Haddocks’ Eyes
  • Ambassador of Imperfect Mood
  • from Vain Empires
  • The Secession of Science from Christian Europe
  • Christ among the Moneychangers, 1929
  • The Long Vacations
  • A Version of Pastoral
  • The Advent of Common Law in Littoral Pursuits
  • Florida Pest Control
  • The Shadow-Line
  • Van Gogh in the Pulpit
  • Britain without Baedeker
  • Tristes Tropiques
  • The Burning Man
  • Animal Actors on the English Stage after 1642
  • Flower, of Zimbabwe
  • Keats in India
  • from Night Battle
  • Florida in January
  • Sundays in the South
  • Mother on the St. Johns
  • from Long Island Sins
  • Blues for Penelope
  • Nothing
  • The English Light
  • Larkin
  • from Paradise Lost
  • Song
  • For the Hostages
  • The Words
  • Dear AC
  • Dear DD
  • My Father as Madame Butterfly
  • Pera Palas
  • Alexander Sarcophagus

Deception Island: Selected Early Poems, 1974-1999

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    A Paperback by William Logan

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      View other formats and editions of Deception Island: Selected Early Poems, 1974-1999 by William Logan

      Publisher: Salt Publishing
      Publication Date: 15/04/2011
      ISBN13: 9781844717170, 978-1844717170
      ISBN10: 1844717178

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      William Logan’s poetry has been called elegant, difficult, cranky, formidable, dazzling, intoxicating, and ominous. For almost forty years, he has published poems that do not fit comfortably with the work of most of his contemporaries, and perhaps do not want to fit at all. The poems in Deception Island, a selection from his first five books, find their souls in the soullessness of modern life – if he looks upon the present with a withering eye, he sees the roots of later darkness in the early sins of culture. He might be called a moral poet, if he were not so suspicious of the certainties of morality. Nonetheless, he takes a resistant pleasure in the Byzantine contrivance of Venice, in the empty vision of the American west, and in the romantic longing of British landscape. He is equally at home in the privileges of free verse and in the older metrical line, sometimes roughened into sensibility, and rarely heard now with such command or control. Logan has an impeccable ear, a darkening view, and a belief that the poet’s job is to work in language, to do things with words, without attempting to persuade or forgive. In his poems, the echoes of Lowell, Auden, and other modern masters can sometimes be heard; but he has fused his influences into a poetic line that is personal in the private wrestling with language that the poet must accept as his task.



      Trade Review

      Sad-faced Men (1982): Logan writes like an angel – an elegant, literary angel.

      -- Donald Hall * Iowa Review *

      ‘The most hated man in American poetry,’ a title one could be proud of in this time of fawning and favor-trading.

      -- Robert McDowell * Hudson Review *

      The unloveliness of some of the feelings to which Logan gives vent is refreshing, a counter to the melancholy transcendentalism of many of his contemporaries. He takes America personally. . . . Logan’s are never going to be the Nation’s Favourite Poems, but their presence reminds us of what poetry can include.

      -- Sean O’Brien * Times Literary Supplement *

      Macbeth in Venice (2003): A construct of elegant thematic and formal irony…Logan’s strengths are those of a learned poet – a confident grasp of formal and thematic resource, an archivist’s love of the past and an impassioned concern for tradition.

      -- J. T. Barbarese * New York Times Book Review *

      The Whispering Gallery (2005): In a very different vein, that scrupulous and at times ironic austerity distinguishes William Logan's new collection of poems, The Whispering Gallery. Its feelings are under pressure of exactitude and clarity. The flashes of humour are all the more telling.

      -- George Steiner * Times Literary Supplement *

      William Logan’s work has frequently elicited comparison with W. H. Auden and Robert Lowell, and for good reason.

      -- James Matthew Wilson * Notre Dame Review *

      Strange Flesh (2008): A hard-boiled formalist with a redoubtable aptitude for tersely fastidious diction and sinewy prosody whipped into fighting trim. . . . He can hold his own with just about anyone in vivisecting the vanity of human wishes with savage aplomb.

      -- David Barber * New York Times Book Review *

      Table of Contents
      • Contents
      • from Sad-faced Men
      • Deception Island
      • The Object
      • Observing Whales through Binoculars
      • Seventy-Six
      • Two Lives
      • Travel Report
      • Ice
      • The Man on the Bed
      • The Mantis
      • A Portrait by Bellocq
      • Tatiana Kalatschova
      • The Lizard in His Medium
      • from Difficulty
      • Clare and Silence
      • Arcanum
      • The Angels among the Liars
      • Money and Dürer
      • Black Harbor
      • Summer Island
      • Blue Yacht
      • Travel
      • Folly
      • Green Island
      • The King of Black Pudding
      • Flour Mites as Moral Beings
      • This Island
      • from Sullen Weedy Lakes
      • Moorhen
      • Capability Brown in the Tropics
      • The Rivers of England
      • Banana Republics
      • Debora Sleeping
      • Christ Church, Oxford / 26 October 1881
      • 3-13 September 1752
      • The Underground
      • Racial Prejudice in Imperial Rome
      • Major Graves
      • To the Honourable Committee
      • James at Sixty
      • Haddocks’ Eyes
      • Ambassador of Imperfect Mood
      • from Vain Empires
      • The Secession of Science from Christian Europe
      • Christ among the Moneychangers, 1929
      • The Long Vacations
      • A Version of Pastoral
      • The Advent of Common Law in Littoral Pursuits
      • Florida Pest Control
      • The Shadow-Line
      • Van Gogh in the Pulpit
      • Britain without Baedeker
      • Tristes Tropiques
      • The Burning Man
      • Animal Actors on the English Stage after 1642
      • Flower, of Zimbabwe
      • Keats in India
      • from Night Battle
      • Florida in January
      • Sundays in the South
      • Mother on the St. Johns
      • from Long Island Sins
      • Blues for Penelope
      • Nothing
      • The English Light
      • Larkin
      • from Paradise Lost
      • Song
      • For the Hostages
      • The Words
      • Dear AC
      • Dear DD
      • My Father as Madame Butterfly
      • Pera Palas
      • Alexander Sarcophagus

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