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“Auden once said that ‘a poet cannot bring us any truth without introducing into his poetry the problematic, the painful, the disorderly, the ugly.’ Steven Cramer's exacting, orderly poetry is committed to the complicated textures of feeling; this poet’s made a sort of pact with emotional life which goes like this: Nothing here will be inflated, everything here will be confronted, and whatever music feeling will yield will be tuned to the heart's true pitch. Thus, full as they are with the difficult stuff of the real, these poems also startle us with their plain and daily beauties. ‘The sturdiest houses,’ he writes, ‘have this lived-in look.’ These poems, likewise, feel lived-in, strong and genuine as houses.”
—Mark Doty |
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| Brookline Books |
| 1997 / 98 pages |
| ISBN 1571290338 |
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