The Happiness of this World

Fiction & Literature, Poetry, American
Cover of the book The Happiness of this World by Karl Kirchwey, Penguin Publishing Group
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Karl Kirchwey ISBN: 9781440684548
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group Publication: January 11, 2007
Imprint: G.P. Putnam's Sons Language: English
Author: Karl Kirchwey
ISBN: 9781440684548
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication: January 11, 2007
Imprint: G.P. Putnam's Sons
Language: English

It is this "shockability" that informs Karl Kirchwey's new work. Through four collections, he has explored the resonances between past and present, seeking a sense of home in a world of losses. Now, as the horrors of the modern world crowd in on him, he meditates on the future his children will inherit. These are angry poems, tender poems, poems of hope, love, and despair.

Reviewing Kirchwey's last book in The New Criterion, William Logan wrote: "An elegy for an uncle, a World War II pilot killed in the Pacific, reminds us that we live only by the sacrifice of the dead, and therefore in their shadows. Shadows fall frequently over these poems, from lives corrupted, crippled, or destroyed," and in the concluding section of this new work, a prose memoir with poems that will appear in full in Parnassus, the poet revisits that dead uncle and the unhappy generations preceding his own. Seeking out family origins and family secrets, this section climaxes in a holy Hindu pilgrimage in honor of the dead and returns the poet, who in his search has circled the globe, to the family of the living and the circumscribed happiness of this world.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

It is this "shockability" that informs Karl Kirchwey's new work. Through four collections, he has explored the resonances between past and present, seeking a sense of home in a world of losses. Now, as the horrors of the modern world crowd in on him, he meditates on the future his children will inherit. These are angry poems, tender poems, poems of hope, love, and despair.

Reviewing Kirchwey's last book in The New Criterion, William Logan wrote: "An elegy for an uncle, a World War II pilot killed in the Pacific, reminds us that we live only by the sacrifice of the dead, and therefore in their shadows. Shadows fall frequently over these poems, from lives corrupted, crippled, or destroyed," and in the concluding section of this new work, a prose memoir with poems that will appear in full in Parnassus, the poet revisits that dead uncle and the unhappy generations preceding his own. Seeking out family origins and family secrets, this section climaxes in a holy Hindu pilgrimage in honor of the dead and returns the poet, who in his search has circled the globe, to the family of the living and the circumscribed happiness of this world.

More books from Penguin Publishing Group

Cover of the book Cuba Straits by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Victorious Century by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book The Appetites of Girls by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book The Fourth Bear by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Lie After Lie by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Left Hand of the Law by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Odyssey by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Taking on the System by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Saved by Cake by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Selected Poems by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Vicky Peterwald: Rebel by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Rock and Roll Baby Names by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Faux Paw by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Mistress of Rome by Karl Kirchwey
Cover of the book Electrical Nutrition by Karl Kirchwey
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy