Publication

1994 - Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Language

English

Word Count

25,250 words, Guess

Page Count

101 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • LibraryThing488267
  • Goodreads6086465

Classifications

  • DDC811/.54
  • LCCPS3545.E4735 S86 1994

Description

The title of Theodore Weiss's thirteenth book of poetry, A Sum of Destructions, expresses the paradox that informs the collection. Our lives inevitably sustain losses small and large. The more given, the more losable. However, we experience our gifts perhaps best, certainly most poignantly, in their loss. Against the backdrop of destruction, these poems propose the grand total to which our gifts add up. "Fractions" directly reflects the volume's theme. Emphasizing the root of its title - fracture, brokenness - the poem at the same time celebrates the recovery we can enjoy - through feeling, thoughts, words - of things broken or lost. With ardent cadence of thought and word, Weiss explores the human and natural conditions. Attending to his own moods, feelings, and ideas, he also confronts the predicaments of others in their search for basic identity. Language itself - its resources, private lights, and profound interplay with our lives - no less engages him. He witnesses our reliance on that language as well as the frustrations and confusions in which it often embroils us. Through a voice filled with awe, a summation of our lives, however fragile, is Weiss's gift to us.

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