Synopsis
Now back in print after more than 20 years, Michael Blumenthal's DaysWe Would Rather Know, originally published by Viking-Penguin and sold out in both its original printings, was one of the most admired, and most influential, books of American poetry of the l980s, and marked the auspicious continuation of one of the decade's most promising debuts. Of Michael Blumenthal's first book, Sympathetic Magic, Howard Nemerov said, "The last first book I remember as having this strangeness and
distinction was called Harmonium."
That comparison to the work of Wallace Stevens was, if anything, more apt in the case of this astonishing second collection, a collection that helped establish Mr. Blumenthal as a master of language in his own right. He worked his brand of magic with unforgettable imagery ("When your wife uttered your son like a large syllable into this world"), a lambent humor ("I wish Robert Rauschenberg would take back his bathtub and his floating goat"), and a playful eroticism ("My mouth puddles with bourbon and the taste of your thighs"). He revealed a sensibility that conflates the present with the past, irreverently aligning psychiatrists, baseball, and word processor courses alongside Odysseus, Rapunzel, and Rembrandt, and that lavishes on its subjects a vigorous and refreshing sensuality.
While different in scope, subject, and style, these seventy poems all body forth a central theme: that-as reality is dissatisfying and satisfaction elusive-hope is in itself an antidote, and possibility is always invigorating. "Love is rarely as exciting as the wish for love," writes Blumenthal; Days We Would Rather Know suggests that we are as fulfilled,
as animated, by our longing as by the resolution of those wishes.
The New Republic, 1984 - Helen Vendler
Michael Blumenthal's second collection of poems, Days We Would Rather Know, adds a buoyant and odd new presence to contemporary American poetry... I cannot think of anyone in America just now who might write as Blumenthal does.... These are a young man's poems, dizzy with discovering that something can be affirmed, that the world can be loved.