Short, sharp musings on things profound and mundane (and sometimes both) from the Pulitzer Prize winning poet
C. K. Williams has never been afraid to push the boundaries of poetic form--in fact, he's known for it, with long, lyrical lines that compel, enthrall, and ensnare. In his latest work, All at Once, Williams again embodies this spirit of experimentation, carving out fresh spaces for himself and surprising his readers once more with inventions both formal and lyrical.
Somewhere between prose poems, short stories, and personal essays, the musings in this collection are profound, personal, witty, and inventive--sometimes all at once. Here are the starkly beautiful images that also pepper his poems: a neighbor's white butane tank in March "glares in the sunlight, raw and unseemly, like a breast inappropriately unclothed in the painful chill." Here are the tender, masterful sketches of characters Williams has encountered: a sign painter and skid-row denizen who makes an impression on the young soon-to-be poet with his "terrific focus, an intensity I'd never seen in an adult before." And here are a husband's hymns to his beloved wife, to her laughter, which "always has something keen and sweet to it, an edge of something like song."
This is a book that provokes pathos and thought, that inspires sympathy and contemplation. It is both fiercely representative of Williams's work and like nothing he's written before--a collection to be admired, celebrated, and above all read again and again.
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Praise for "Writers Writing Dying
""[Williams knows] how to make love to the page, urging the reader to go slow--which is how all poetry should be read." --Dana Jennings, "The New York Times"
Praise for C. K. Williams"Williams's scorching honesty has always been his calling card. His poetry proceeds not from a verbal impulse, not from a lyrical impulse, not even from a prophetic or visionary impulse, but from a moral impulse. Everything, in his work, is held up to the most exacting ethical scrutiny, beginning with the poet himself. Implicitly, and often explicitly, this scrutiny extends to the very act of writing poems in the first place. And so while other poets sometimes make a show of questioning the value of poetry, Williams really means it." --William Deresiewicz, "The New York Times""C. K. Williams's familiar long lines create tremendous space within his poems. From beginning to end, a poem might cross remarkable distances, its roomy stanzas opening a world of association and resonance, lines unreeling from an observed fact or remembered scene to deepened understanding of the way things are, the way things were . . . Williams observes and transcribes human experience with remarkable tenderness and charity . . . One feels in the textures of Williams's writing a pure conviction and a commitment to seeing a higher dimension to poetry. When Williams writes of educating the soul and of the spiritually transforming power of beauty, he is convincing." --Ian Tromp, "Poetry""Williams's one faith is that things can be said, that subjects can be talked about, that poetry can seek to clarify as much as to beguile . . . Sentence construction, one of the more neglected features of the poetic arsenal, is Williams's great strength, his 'Ancient Mariner'-like power to claim and hold the reader's uncomfortable but rewarded assent. Developed in particular in the long lines for which Williams first came to attention a generation back, this power of construction serves to clarify at the same time as to include, to guarantee commitment to the matter in hand, and to lend its own extensive music as a source of authority." --Sean O'Brien, "The Guardian"
Praise for "All at Once""[Williams writes] in a voice dripping with equal parts nostalgia and self-interrogation . . . He muses on the minutiae of his life, keeping each vignette to a brief and tightly rendered prose poem . . . [Williams is] a master of poetics in his twilight years." --"Publishers Weekly"""All at Once," defies easy categorization . . . What Williams has written here definitely are poems, but they're also simultaneously mini-memoirs or even flash fiction. It ultimately doesn't matter how we define them . . . The strongest parts of the book are those that look mortality in the eye . . . The similes often pop from the page . . . Some poems . . . may very well stand among the most rewarding of Williams' tremendous career . . . He's such a keen observer of our world--of our rhythms and our rhetorics. Given all of the chameleonic things he has achieved, perhaps it should come as no surprise to see Williams reinvent himself yet again as our elder statesman of TMI-overload and still continue to demonstrate why he's considered a national treasure." --Andrew Irvin, "The Philadelphia Inquirer "Praise for C. K. Williams"Williams's scorching honesty has always been his calling card. His poetry proceeds not from a verbal impulse, not from a lyrical impulse, not even from a prophetic or visionary impulse, but from a moral impulse. Everything, in his work, is held up to the most exacting ethical scrutiny, beginning with the poet himself. Implicitly, and often explicitly, this scrutiny extends to the very act of writing poems in the first place. And so while other poets sometimes make a show of questioning the value of poetry, Williams really means it." --William Deresiewicz, "The New York Times""C. K. Williams's familiar long lines create tremendous space within his poems. From beginning to end, a poem might cross remarkable distances, its roomy stanzas opening a world of association and resonance, lines unreeling from an observed fact or remembered scene to deepened understanding of the way things are, the way things were . . . Williams observes and transcribes human experience with remarkable tenderness and charity . . . One feels in the textures of Williams's writing a pure conviction and a commitment to seeing a higher dimension to poetry. When Williams writes of educating the soul and of the spiritually transforming power of beauty, he is convincing." --Ian Tromp, "Poetry""Williams's one faith is that things can be said, that subjects can be talked about, that poetry can seek to clarify as much as to beguile . . . Sentence construction, one of the more neglected features of the poetic arsenal, is Williams's great strength, his 'Ancient Mariner'-like power to claim and hold the reader's uncomfortable but rewarded assent. Developed in particular in the long lines for which Williams first came to attention a generation back, this power of construction serves to clarify at the same time as to include, to guarantee commitment to the matter in hand, and to lend its own extensive music as a source of authority." --Sean O'Brien, "The Guardian"
[Williams writes] in a voice dripping with equal parts nostalgia and self-interrogation . . . He muses on the minutiae of his life, keeping each vignette to a brief and tightly rendered prose poem . . . [Williams is] a master of poetics in his twilight years. "Publishers Weekly"
"All at Once," defies easy categorization . . . What Williams has written here definitely are poems, but they're also simultaneously mini-memoirs or even flash fiction. It ultimately doesn't matter how we define them . . . The strongest parts of the book are those that look mortality in the eye . . . The similes often pop from the page . . . Some poems . . . may very well stand among the most rewarding of Williams' tremendous career . . . He's such a keen observer of our world--of our rhythms and our rhetorics. Given all of the chameleonic things he has achieved, perhaps it should come as no surprise to see Williams reinvent himself yet again as our elder statesman of TMI-overload and still continue to demonstrate why he's considered a national treasure. "Andrew Irvin, The Philadelphia Inquirer""
"[Williams writes] in a voice dripping with equal parts nostalgia and self-interrogation . . . He muses on the minutiae of his life, keeping each vignette to a brief and tightly rendered prose poem . . . [Williams is] a master of poetics in his twilight years." --Publishers Weekly
"All at Once, defies easy categorization . . . What Williams has written here definitely are poems, but they're also simultaneously mini-memoirs or even flash fiction. It ultimately doesn't matter how we define them . . . The strongest parts of the book are those that look mortality in the eye . . . The similes often pop from the page . . . Some poems . . . may very well stand among the most rewarding of Williams' tremendous career . . . He's such a keen observer of our world--of our rhythms and our rhetorics. Given all of the chameleonic things he has achieved, perhaps it should come as no surprise to see Williams reinvent himself yet again as our elder statesman of TMI-overload and still continue to demonstrate why he's considered a national treasure." --Andrew Irvin, The Philadelphia Inquirer
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