Product Details
Memory Gardens

Memory Gardens
By Robert Creeley

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


11 new or used available from $0.01


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3966560 in Books
  • Published on: 1986-05
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 88 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Sometimes it seems as if Creeley's new poems are merely an exercise in being Creeley, as in the poem "Out": "Within pitiless/ indifference/ things left/ out." Or "There": "On such a day/ did it happen/ by happy coincidence/ just here." Or "Heavenly Hannah": "Oh Hannie/help me/ help." The lacunae, however, are well earned, not only by Creeley's previous worka collection of his poems was published to acclaim in 1983but by the longer, more complex abbreviations surrounding these extraordinary minipoems. Memory Gardens is rife with the scent of nostalgia, that state of being in which something's absence is its strongest presence, where emptiness becomes the fullness of that which is long gone. What Creeley has to say about this worn-out themeabout cemeteries, faded photographs, dead parents and the knock-knock of death itselfmatters because of his style. His long-standing talent is ripening to ever-more gorgeous effects.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Creeley offers a "uniquely cubist perspective, at once abstracting and distancing" (Memory Gardens, LJ 4/1/96).
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
Always
Apres Anders
Baby Disaster
Back
Bookcase
By The Rude Bidge
Classical
Days
The Doctor
Dogs
The Door
Earth
Eats
Echo
Echo
Edge
Fathers
Flicker
For J.d.
For J.d. (2)
For Pen
For Ted Berrigan
For The New Year
Fort William Henry %pemaquid
Forty
Four For John Daley
Funeral
Go
Hands
Hearts
Heaven Knows
Heavenly Hannah
Heavy
Helen's House
Hotel
Hotel Schrieder, Heidelberg
I'll Win
Ich Bin
Knock, Knock
Language
Lecture
Lost
Lovers
Main And Merrimac
March Moon
Massachusetts May
Memories
Memory
Memory Gardens
Mother's Photograph
My Own Stuff
New England
Nothing
Old
Old Days
Out
Picture
Questions
Religion
The Rock
Room
Skin And Bones
Sound
Summer Nights
Supper
The Tally Stick
Thanksgiving's Done
There
Too Late
Vacation's End
Valentine
Vision
Waiting
Wall
When April And His Showers Sweet
Window
Winter Morning
Wyatt's May
-- Table of Poems from Poem Finder®

Any publication at this point in Robert Creeley's career would be cause for celebration, but there are special pleasures to be savored in Memory Gardens, a lovely and accessible work that reminds one of A. R. Ammons' Briefings: Poems SmallandEasy because of its tautness and Frank O'Hara's Lunch Poems because of its conversational lilt. This is no book for only the scholars' shelves: Creeley masters an unpretentious and intimate tone throughout the book, sharing his past and his memories of the past food, toys, relatives, and playmates. But there is also an insistent moodiness and contemplative sadness to the work. The poet is now in his sixtieth year, and he is painfully conscious of time: he writes with "stiff old fingers" in "whatever time's left for us here" in a "seeming dullness of enclosure." Images of winter, darkness, and harsh weather reinforce these sober calculations while at the same time providing a foil for the vividly realized moments of perception when he sees "icicles/like teeth," a single "immaculate/ strawberry," and his very own "toes in two/patient rows." Memory Gardens also contains a splendid reminiscence of childhood, "Lovers," a poem in which all "was free the flowers / the lanes we looked / in. . . , " and two moving elegies, "Valentine" (for his mother) and "Doctor" (for his father). Creeley concludes with "A Calendar," a poetic tour de force containing a poem for each of the twelve months of the year. In spite of the highly personal nature of these poems, Creeley manages to incorporate, with admirable ease, key passages from Ginsberg, Olson, Chaucer, Wyatt, and Emerson as part of the text of his poems. Memory Gardens is a book that will wear extremely well. It is certainly one of the three or four most important poetry tides of 1986, and no poetry collection will be complete without it. -- From Independent Publisher