This Lamont Prize-winning book offers all the joy, sadness, humor, beauty, and song that typically characterizes the work of the well-respected but unfortunately lesser-known American poet Gerald Stern. Stern, who has been writing since the 1960s, made a name for himself in 1977 with the publication of Lucky Life, now his most renowned collection.
In Lucky Life Stern takes the reader on a journey, pausing everywhere from the streets of New York to post-Holocaust Germany to the soil of a lobelia plant. In an intimate and mature voice, he shares with us the lineage of his ancestors; his personal relationships; and bits of art, music, history--even the neighbors he chats with on the beach. His style is Whitmanesque, urging us to "listen a little for the spongy world" after it has rained, and reminding us how to "understand the power of maples."
Reading Stern's poetry is like listening to the words of a loving grandparent who has been through his or her share of painful experiences but has come to terms with them through wisdom gained from a long life. Stern offers several reasons for surviving in this often senseless world, but one of the most outstanding is found in the title poem: "Lucky you can be purified over and over again. / Lucky there is the same cleanliness for everyone."
From Library Journal
"For two decades, no one has equaled [Stern's] compassionate, surreal parables" (Odd Mercy, LJ 11/15/96).- compassionate, surreal parables" (Odd Mercy, LJ 11/15/96).Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Lucky Life: Poems FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
"For two decades, no one has equaled [Stern's] compassionate, surreal parables" (Odd Mercy, LJ 11/15/96).