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Rigoberto González
Wednesday Shout Out
Believe it or not, it’s a coincidence that this particular book cover made my Shout Out feature on Halloween. This is cult poet Beckian Fritz Goldberg’s fifth volume of poems. Though she was on faculty at Arizona State University while I was attending their MFA program, regretfully I never studied with her, but I read everything she publishes because she’s brilliant, she’s bitchin’, she’s Beckian. Washed in the River Of course the woman with the mouse-child was famous, at the end of suffering. She kept him in And though only children were meant itself with everything. That’s why of the gray thing to the window. Where both of them The second you see yourself in the suffering
There’s an unfairness to the facile classifications of beauty. Why must the fair sister get to speak in pleasantries? Why must the plain one be scary? These dichotomies, which we have learned from youth, condition our associative thinking: pretty is good, ugly is bad; white is positive, dark is negative. And so that ambiguous couplet in the end: Does empathy lead to action? Or does identification lead to denial? Does one cleanse the wounds of the wounded? Or does one wash their hands of the matter? Fritz Goldberg’s book keeps readers on their toes because these narratives of human freakdom are actually mirrors, once you stare deep into the subject’s eyes and recognize yourself. (From The Book of Accident, published by the University of Akron Press, 2006. Used with the permission of the author.) CommentsI don't know the poet yet, but I DO know the cover artist. His name is Steven Assael. The painting on the cover is actually a detail of a larger work entitled AT MOTHER--a painting within a painting, hidden behind a working door within the piece. Here's the full painting: http://www.stevenassael.com/i/p_assael_atmother_closed.html "Fritz Goldberg's book keeps readers on their toes because these narratives of human freakdom are actually mirrors, once you stare deep in the subjects eyes and recognize yourself." That's very interesting, and Sheryl's comments are interesting too, considering that Assael's work makes use of mirrors, mirror images, and (as you see in the painting) the television screen, all in that hyperrealistic style, full of contrasts--darks and brights. I wonder how much the poet drew inspiration from this particular visual artist (an ekphrastic or two, perhaps?), or if poet and painter are simply of like minds. Fascinating, all around. Thanks for posting it. |
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Christian BökStephen Burt Daisy Fried Rigoberto González Major Jackson Reginald Shepherd A.E. Stallings STAFF WRITERS
Michael MarcinkowskiEd Park Fred Sasaki Don Share Elizabeth Stigler Nick Twemlow Emily Warn PREVIOUS WRITERS
Kwame DawesKenneth Goldsmith Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Patricia Smith Rachel Zucker RECENT COMMENTS
Evidence, But of What?, a Mini-Essay on Form (6)more scots, less porn (8) The Anatomy of Pleasure (16) Happy Birthday, George Gordon, Lord Byron (4) The Nude Formalism (6) RECENT POSTS
Evidence, But of What?, a Mini-Essay on Form (Daisy Fried)Illness and Poetry (Reginald Shepherd) The Bride-Choosing (Daisy Fried) Good Night, Sweet Ladies: A Thought About Slightness (Daisy Fried) The Anatomy of Pleasure (Daisy Fried) CATEGORY ARCHIVE
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Christian BökStephen Burt Kwame Dawes Daisy Fried Kenneth Goldsmith Rigoberto González Major Jackson Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Ed Park Fred Sasaki Reginald Shepherd Patricia Smith A.E. Stallings Nick Twemlow Emily Warn Rachel Zucker Subscribe to the RSS feed. ![]() What is RSS? |

