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ISBN: PB: 9780226096193

University of Chicago Press

March 2014

72 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

PB:
£15,00
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Particle and Wave

Are we alone? If so, "Particle and Wave" insists that we need not be lonely. Here the periodic table of elements – a system familiar to many of us from high school chemistry – unfolds in a series of unexpected meanings with connotations public, personal, and existential. Based on a logic that considers the atomic symbol an improvised phoneme, "Particle and Wave" is keenly attuned to the qualities of voice and concerned with how these improvisations fall on the listening ear. From the most recent housing bust, to the artistic visions of Christo and Jeanne Claude, to the labors of the Curies, to Pliny the Younger's account of the eruption of Vesuvius, culture and world histories are recontextualized through the lens of personal experience. Muscular, precise, structurally varied, and imagistic, these poems engage in lyricism yet resist mere confession. In doing so they project the self as a composite, speaking in a variety of registers, from the nursery rhyme songster, to the ascetic devotee, to the unapologetic sensualist. They welcome all comers and elbow the bounded physical world to make way for a dynamic, new subjectivity.

About the Author

Benjamin Landry is a Meijer Post-MFA Fellow at the University of Michigan and the author of "An Ocean Away".

Reviews

"'We split the atom because we could / and are now outfitting cockroaches with microphones; / our drones have a bird's-eye imagination. ' In other words, progress marches on. Benjamin Landry has kept up with it by considering each element in the periodic table as an associative starting point for a poem. Those lines are from the one about Uranium. There seem to be a lot more elements than there were the last time I checked (Hafnium, anyone?) and together they all impart a mysterious objectivity to the freewheeling lyricism of Particle and Wave. The poetry of everyday (and not so everyday) objects has seldom been as strikingly realized as in this exciting first collection" – John Ashbery

"Benjamin Landry's poems riffing off the periodic table playfully combine and separate the properties of the elements with family memories, with myth and history, with investigations of science, photography, and belief. In Landry's alchemical poems, one object or event quickly metamorphoses into another, mirroring the poems' obsessions with the problems of image-making: what part of physical experience will stay, whether in words, memory, or art, in a world so transitory that we have only the trace elements of language to prove anything existed? Smart and brilliantly inventive, the poems are as malleable, and shimmering, as mercury" – Paisley Rekdal

"What is to be gained by taking the periodic table of the elements (once again) as a platform for the imagination? Very nearly everything, as the poems in this wonderful volume make clear. In 'Polonium', we may hear the voice of Marie Curie, and the etymological echo of her native Poland. In 'Gallium', on the strength of a gentle pun, we may encounter a lovely ekphrastic on a famous ancient sculpture ('The Dying Gaul'). 'Cobalt' narrates a beautiful tale about the transport, historically and geographically, of a precious stone. 'Potassium' meditates, by way of the body's osmotic system, on the tide-swells of erotic attraction. Written with gemlike precision and unfailing musicality, with exhilarating flights of imagination and gentle moments of recognition, these are poems for heart and mind in tandem, as for the particle and wave in competing theories of light" – Linda Gregerson

"Reading the poems of Benjamin Landry's remarkable and ambitious debut, 'Particle and Wave', 'you can begin to feel / what the electron feels / in renouncing its steady orbit'. Like a reflecting telescope, they reveal the distance – and the intimacies – between the elements of the cosmos and those of a human being, even those of a poem, as 'The stars word you across, / practicing your names'. Enticing and resonant, these are poems that stay with you, 'a scrap of a verse repeated / like a flag flying in the skull'" – Angie Estes