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The End of Michelangelo

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Reading the poetry of Dan Gerber, we are summoned to this larger truth: Though we live in fraught times, on the tipping point of human self-destruction, we and our planet are still very much alive.

In one of his last sonnets, nearly five hundred years ago, Michelangelo Buonarroti confronted the paradox of our earthly existence: "Why beauty mixed with terror, feeds so strangely my desire." Reading The End of Michelangelo, we are similarly reminded that the very fact of being alive—experiencing our fleeting, fragile existence—is our only source of joy, our only avenue of consolation. These are poems that wake us up, revivify our desire to go on living despite our times, to counter our times; if poetry has a purpose, it may be exactly this. As T.H. White suggests, we can't save our world if we don't first savor it.

"Dan Gerber tenderly reels his readers through the 'beautiful movie' he calls the passing of time on Earth, in a language completely unadorned and Zen-like in its quietude. The thing itself carries the weight off these poems that recall the deep imagery of Vallejo, Neruda, and Wright." —Rain Taxi

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    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2022

      If poetry can lay claim to a healing or restorative power, it may well be found in Gerber's poetry. In this, his 10th collection (after Particles: New and Selected Poems), Gerber draws on personal memories and the Central California landscape to reveal the fleeting, everyday marvels which are always available to us if we pay enough attention. Whether confronting a moose on a mountain trail, glimpsing a spider web's "flash of meteor tracks/ in the moving air," or tracing "late afternoon sunlight/ reflected off the water upslope through/ lakeside ferns and the intricate weaving of boughs, on the ceiling," he discovers "some beacon of delight/ within the sadness of things." The poet's Zen openness to nature attunes him to synthesize what he sees with what he feels through spare but immediate language, summing up his poetics in one concise sentence: "Without poetry the visible and invisible/ worlds wouldn't be aware of each other." VERDICT A timeless oasis of quietude in our contemporary maelstrom of uncertainty and apprehension, Gerber's poetry vividly reminds us that while "the scale of pleasure ascends into terror.../ the pleasure is in being alive."--Fred Muratori

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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