After the Fall
ISBN: 9780822990710
Platform/Publisher: Project MUSE / University of Pittsburgh Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Chapters; Download: Chapters

Field is among the first American poets to write proudly and clearly about urban gay life.This new-and-selected (Field¿s 10th book of verse overall) shows that his virtues--and limits--have remained consistent throughout. At his best Field is direct, likable, modest, charming, a storyteller : he writes purposefully and directly of bathhouse life in the 1970s, Jewish-American heritage, Middle Eastern travels in "a world where, unlike ours, men like each other"; and allegorically of the Pacific octopus, "who needs love,/ who is a mess when you meet,/ but who can open up like a flower with petal arms." At less than his best, Field¿s unadorned style can make him sound predictable: his poems are only as interesting as their stories and ideas. "Nowadays there¿s nothing radical left, certainly not/ in the Village," he complains in a poem from the 1990s. A recent 9/11 poem objects to "a gang of psychopaths taking over the government." Irreplaceable in the history of gay American writing, Field helped invent some of the attitudes and the subgenres that are now in common use. If many of Field¿s own poems now seem flat and dated, enough still seem fresh to give serious strength to this book. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved


Edward Field is the author of more than ten books of poetry, including Counting Myself Lucky and A Frieze for a Temple of Love , and a memoir, The Man Who Would Marry Susan Sontag, and Other Intimate Literary Portraits of the Bohemian Era . He is also coauthor of three fiction books (written with Neil Derrick, published under the pseudonym of Bruce Elliot). He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the W. H. Auden Award, the Bill Whitehead Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Lambda Literary Award.
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