Poetry

The Line

By Jennifer Moxley

The Line extends in a series of interlocking prose poems, creating a strobe-like effect of intensely imagined moments shifting between sleeping and waking. Sharp, satirical, lush, or clear, the narrative voice twists through, seeking a line through time to braid its selves together. Moxley's intrepid language tosses us into the swim—into a bracing intimacy with the writing consciousness.

These prose poems tell the story of sleeping and waking, of this very bout of writing, of the search for the line of time and the poet's immortality. The Line feels like a classic already, with its just words and its images suggested by sound and experience. It is a poetics but also a real, readable tale.

Alice Notley

We're in the state between sleep and waking, where consciousness resists the tasks of reason and routine but instead views, from the perspective of darkness, the whole span from newborn promise to the old mammals' erosion of muscle. Moxley's usual keen intelligence here comes with an oneiric fluidity as it hunts through the perplexities of life for THE LINE from past to future, the line for words to form and, implicitly, the ideal line of verse these prose poems play against with their amazing leaps, sly humor, and complex inference. You'll wish the morning sun would not win out, the book not come to its end.

Rosmarie Waldrop

Jennifer Moxley is the author of Imagination Verses (Salt, 2003), The Sense Record and other poems (Salt, 2003), and Often Capital (Flood Editions, 2005). She has translated two works by Jacqueline Risset, The Translations Begins and Sleep's Powers. She currently teaches at the University of Maine in Orono.

2007 56 pages $15.00

ISBN: 978-0-942996-61-6

The Post Apollo Catalog

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