Solarium
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
"Solarium is a completely original gem of a book."—Henri Cole, from the foreword
Bowl of the lake. Bowl of the sky.
Bowl of the lake with the sky in it.
You looked at you in the water.
The blizzard is cold.
And the boy in the blizzard is blue.
Jordan Zandi grew up in the rural Midwest, and in 2011 graduated with an MFA in poetry from Boston University, where he was the recipient of a Robert Pinsky Global Fellowship to Bolivia. His poetry has appeared in the New Republic and Little Star.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Zandi's debut collection radiates a fragile warmth in what proves to be an aching and uncommonly ingenious exploration of youth and memory. Like Wallace Stevens, Zandi delights in riddles, anecdotes, and mysterious landscapes; his colorful scenes suggest more than they explain. Unlike Stevens, however, the presiding imagination here is naive, even childlike. "I wish my heart was as big as the world/ but bigger," Zandi writes in the title poem, in which he wonders, "what good is a life that wears away?" Indeed, despite their precocious sensibilities, many of Zandi's poems lament childhood's distance. In the almost painfully earnest "River," the poet tries "to turn back toward" an adolescent friendship, but finds that "Outside,/ the cars rush past, through the glass sounding nothing like water." In "The Circus in Winter," the speaker refuses poetic artifice in favor of plainspokenness: "Our silos No, they are nothing/ but silos. Very good for storing." These moments of plainness, where the poet struggles to make sense of the past, are especially powerful alongside the collection's more oblique (and uneven) fantasias. "Closer, little memory," Zandi writes in "Etch-a-Sketch," "what did you find/ on your treasure hunt?" Zandi's poetry sometimes feels slight, self-involved, or saccharine, but it also has a distinct sensibility, and the book features a number of truly imaginative poems.