This Time We Are Both
November 2010
This Time We Are Both
$15.00 Original price was: $15.00.$13.50Current price is: $13.50.
"To hear Coolidge's music is to fall into its grace."
— Peter Gizzi
About the Book
This Time We Are Both is a previously unpublished work that dates back to the publication of such seminal Clark Coolidge books as The Crystal Text, At Egypt, and Odes to Roba. Based on his first trip to the Soviet Union as he followed the itinerary of the Rova Saxophone Quartet 1989 tour of Leningrad, Vilnius, Riga, Tallinn, Tartu, and Moscow, This Time We Are Both uses a dense stream-of-conscious style that employs a fragmentary, often reverse syntax that is a hallmark of Coolidge’s poetics. Phrases and images leaps between lines to evoke a heady mix of anxiety and paranoia that document and respond to the collapse of the Soviet Union and a city on the verge of starvation and deterioration.
SPECIAL EDITION
26 copies of This Time We Are Both, signed and numbered by the author, in a limited edition. The special edition is sold out.
Author
Praise
Clark Coolidge's
This Time We Are Both is a pyrotechnic fumble through the dark. Written in 1991, and responding to the fall of Soviet Union, Coolidge's book-length poem considers the linguistic rediscoveries that come at the end of an imposed order. Simple nouns and verbs collide wildly, and specificity emerges from the unexpected conjunctions. The words pop with knowledge that has nothing to do with novelty or theory; rather this is a book about how to look, how to balance the body on the legs, how to shake a leg to language. It is at once an elegy to Leningrad and an aubade to St. Petersburg.
— Stan Apps
Like the rest of his oeuvre,
This Time We Are Both shows that, while Language poetry doesn’t care about lyricism and aesthetics, it can sometimes still give pleasure. It a strange, wonderful achievement, even if too few are paying attention.
— Brooks Lampe, the the
This Time We Are Both is a brilliant sounding of the question that surrounds us wherever we are, whenever we are. The poet asks 'who has fallen in with the sound?' This time it is the sound of the poet's coming into a new culture, a new language. The problem of difficulty in all its forms—political, emotional, linguistic—is the subject and the condition of
This Time We Are Both: what brings us near, what keeps us apart. To hear Coolidge's music is to fall into its grace.
— Peter Gizzi
Details
ISBN: 978-1-933254-62-3
Publication Date: November 15, 2010