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Paul Hoover

Rehearsal in Black

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Biographical note:  Paul Hoover is author of eleven poetry collections including Edge and Fold, Poems in Spanish, Winter (Mirror), Totem and Shadow: New & Selected Poems, Viridian, and The Novel: A Poem. He is also widely known as the editor of Postmodern American Poetry: A Norton Anthology and the literary magazine New American Writing. Married to poet and fiction writer Maxine Chernoff, he teaches at San Francisco State University.

 

BIC Basic

EAN13:  9781876857318
ISBN-10:  1876857315
ISBN-13:  9781876857318
Author:  Paul Hoover
Title:  Rehearsal in Black
Series:  Salt Modern Poets
Product class:  BC
Language:  eng
Audience:  General/trade
BIC subject category:  CTCH1
Publisher:  Salt Publishing
Pub date:  01-Nov-01
Extent:  112pp
Height:  216 mm
Width:  140 mm
Thickness:  7 mm
Weight:  168 gms
Supplier:   Gardners Books
Supplier:   Ingram Book Group
Supplier:   Inbooks (James Bennett)
Availability:  IP
Price:  GBP 9.99
Price:  USD 15.95
Rights:  World

 

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spacer Short description/annotation:  Rehearsal in Black is Paul Hoover’s first poetry collection since the appearance of Totem and Shadow: New & Selected Poems in 1999. Containing work in a variety of forms, the book offers incisive comment on postmodern culture, from mass communications to the work of Andy Warhol. This is the most significant collection he has yet produced.

 

Main description:  In a review of Paul Hoover’s work, poet and critic Gillian Conoley refers to its “appetitive inclusionary impulse,” Writing on Viridian, Mary Jo Bang commented: “There is a cool precision in these poems, a striking aptness in the marrying of word to word. And in many of them, there is an unexpected tenderness only half-masked by Hoover’s allegiance to exploring and mapping language’s inherent imperfection.… Hoover’s concern with language’s representational inadequacy is shared by the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poets he’s championed for years in New American Writing and included in Postmodern American Poetry. However his own poems are more direct, more lyrical, and sometimes seethingly and seductively melancholic. Central to all of them (regardless of language’s irrefutable limitations) is his keen intelligence and laconic wit.” The tension between the lyrical and the abstract and the use of traditional forms for postmodern means are among the most consistent features of Hoover’s poetry. In his last three collections, he has explored the unusual poetic form of counted verse, in which the line is determined by the number of words rather than syllables it contains. Inspired by Louis Zukofsky’s “A-14,” his use of counted verse further emphasizes his alternating expansion and contraction of attention. As John Olson comments in a review of Totem and Shadow: New & Selected Poems, “This method of building a poem gives the language a heightened materiality, as if words were mortared together like bricks. The syntax is highly compressed, and one’s reading is forcibly slowed down; one is constrained to focus a deepened attention on each word. We are encouraged to study how we observe, to perceive how language interphases with the external world, to perceive how we perceive.” The knit of attention in each poem continues until the inner and outer minds find resolution. Attention passes through several relational pulses or turns over the course of these longer poems: “To be temporary / here, to say / the word weakness / to the blinding / chorus or sink / in counter song / is all the / lovely spending, not / the true story / but what might / follow.” Rather than pay homage to the insufficiencies or limits of language, Hoover turns postmodern technique to the advantage of expression. His is a poetry of quickly revolving consciousness that bridges quickly a variety of subject matters and concerns. But it also gazes directly at the beauty of ordinary events in which “the blacktop / shines on such / afternoons” or “rain / in Cleveland settles / on the game.” As he writes in the poem “Lights on Bridges,” poetry is a means of finding one’s way, through motion and sound, “out into / the brilliance.”

 

Table of contents:
Part One
Objects as Ourselves
Gilded Instruments
Lights on Bridges
Re(semblance)
Circumstance
Volunteer Bodies
Naima
Blue Differentials
Sixteen Jackies
Part Two
American Gestures
The Task
At the Desiring Vine
Rehearsal in Black
Logical Objects
The Tower
The Unquiet Eye
The Mezzanine
Two Uncertainties
The Mirror
Part Three
The Usual
California
Things That Don’t Exist
Commemorative Gestures
Actual Occasions
Belief and Poetry
Oh, Sure!
Memory’s Sentence
The Explanation
Private Lives
Sortes Evangelicae
Under Flood
American Sphinx
Unforgiven
Necessary Errand

 

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Excerpt from book:  

The Usual

You sit in a hazy northern city
that’s accustomed to your strangeness.
You’re the vaguest shape in the painting,

yet everything is touched with drama—
this wonderful glass of tap water,
the best you’ve ever tasted,

birds standing at strict attention
near the ragged edge of a pool.
As foreign memories course through your hand,

you watch people walking to coffee,
still holding their last cappuccinos—
with a shot of hazelnut, please,

heavy on the foam. The season’s
about to end. Nothing’s extraordinary.
Life’s a composition for toy piano—

muted and thin in the hallways of attention.
And then there comes a settling of affairs.
Sunlight shifts; the thought under the music

turns sober as a mouse. With the certainty of a judge,
the usual steps in, its small chin jutting.
Like all plain things, its voice is reflective:

the usual way of dressing, not unusual weather.
What’ll you have? The usual.
At ten in the morning, in dust and clamor,

your life has locked pleasantly into place.
The mind does things the body will always remember.
Go on. Sit there with your senses,

in a calm of the usual’s making.
Your tragedies are behind you. The clock
strikes so softly, it passes the world’s notice.

 

Review quote:  Paul Hoover’s voice speaks to the closest listening ear as he writes a poetry whose momentum increases with each reading. The short lines and sudden turns of phrasing demand a flying journey through this book. The surprises the reader encounters also give foundation to one of the most imaginative and necessary writers in American verse.

The Bloomsbury Review

 

Review quote:  Paul Hoover’s new collection of poems is something of a departure for a poet known for his humour, his high spirits, and sense of the absurd – an heir, so common wisdom would have it, of the New York school from O’Hara to Ron Padgett. A few poems in Rehearsal in Black do fit this bill: the comic travelogue ‘California,’ for instance, which takes the reader from Hollywood to Mt. Tamalpais.

Marjorie Perloff

 

Review quote:  Hoover always makes sure that the ear – as much as the eye – has plenty to enjoy. Rehearsal in Black is one of those rare books that successfully integrates both old and new poetic traditions, illustrating how poetry, “the science of the irrational,” can still offer rich opportunities for synthesizing oppositional aesthetics.

Fred Muratori
Rain Taxi

 

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