Luminous new poems from one who has long been a poet of gorgeous description William Logan,The New Criterion
Landscape, as Wang Wei says, softens the sharp edges of isolation.
Don't just do something, sit there.
And so I have, so I have,
the seasons curling around me like smoke,
Gone to the end of the earth and back without a sound.from Body and Soul II
This is Charles Wright's first collection of verse since the gathering, inNegative Blue, of his Appalachian Book of the Dead, a trilogy of trilogies hailed among the great long poems of the century (James Longenbach,Boston Review). InA Short History of the Shadow, Wright's return to the landscapes of his early work finds his art resilient in a world haunted by death and the dead.
[Wright] finds the sublime in the unlikeliest places, and at his best makes you think such places are exactly where to look.
William Logan, The New CriterionCharles Wright, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the National Book Award, teaches at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.