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The Night Parade

by Edward Hirsch
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Synopsis

Poems that are strong, sophisticted and filled with a quick sense of life.

Publishers Weekly

Straightforward and precise, these poems, almost exclusively in narrative form, beckon the reader with their immediacy. Gracefully confirming the inextricable links between self and family, Hirsch, winner of a National Book Critics Circle Award for Wild Gratitude , is, at his best, captivating, transforming tremendous respect for and fascination with his Eastern European roots and Chicago upbringing into enlightened, richly detailed verse that artfully side-steps sentimentality. Less favorable works are static, insulated: like home movies when forced upon a nonrelative, they unfortunately exclude and occasionally bore. When Hirsch ventures outside his own experiences, the most ambitious example of this being ``And Who Will Look Upon Our Testimony,'' a long poem ostensibly about black death in 14th century Europe, he demonstrates his acuity as an observer and poet: `` `In the midst of this pestilence, there came / To an end . . .' / Fortunate are those who come afterward, / The unfallen inheritors of earth / Who turn away from the Dance / Of Death dying in the mind.'' With humility and passion, Hirsch illumes the contradictory resilience and weakness of the human spirit. (Apr.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Straightforward and precise, these poems, almost exclusively in narrative form, beckon the reader with their immediacy. Gracefully confirming the inextricable links between self and family, Hirsch, winner of a National Book Critics Circle Award for Wild Gratitude , is, at his best, captivating, transforming tremendous respect for and fascination with his Eastern European roots and Chicago upbringing into enlightened, richly detailed verse that artfully side-steps sentimentality. Less favorable works are static, insulated: like home movies when forced upon a nonrelative, they unfortunately exclude and occasionally bore. When Hirsch ventures outside his own experiences, the most ambitious example of this being ``And Who Will Look Upon Our Testimony,'' a long poem ostensibly about black death in 14th century Europe, he demonstrates his acuity as an observer and poet: `` `In the midst of this pestilence, there came / To an end . . .' / Fortunate are those who come afterward, / The unfallen inheritors of earth / Who turn away from the Dance / Of Death dying in the mind.'' With humility and passion, Hirsch illumes the contradictory resilience and weakness of the human spirit. Apr.

Library Journal

A majority of the poems in Hirsch's third collection are ``memorandums of affections,'' homages to a personal family saga of hard work and migration, sacrifice, and change. The aim is to tell those ``stories that define us to ourselves/ As we go lurching into the future.'' But whether attending to the homey details of his childhood ``Nancy and Lenie are taking turns riding/ On the handlebars of my J.C. Higgins bicycle'' or the aftermath of the Chicago Fire ``A muddy black settlement/On the plain'', Hirsch's touch is deft, appropriate, even surprising, as when siblings are described as ``simultaneities sharing/A father and mother.'' While these days hoards of younger poets ransack their grandparents' photo albums for ideas, few are able to encapsulate their histories as vividly or movingly.-- Fred Muratori, Cornell Univ. Lib.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2003
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Pages
96
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780679722991

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