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A lyric exploration of crisis, transformation, love, and recovery
Taking Dante and other catalogers of failure and ruin (Baudelaire, Trakl, Rimbaud) as its guiding lights, Scarecrow charts situations of extremity and madness: "Are you / insistent? Are you dead? / Are you guilty? Has your / name been lifted, a vein / of earth from earth?" It also charts the insistence of time's passing and with it the awakening to both new and foreclosed possibilities. What will remain for us after the disaster? How will we rebuild? To whom will we address ourselves and with what voice? Also a love poem, one of desire and hope, Scarecrow aligns a tragic sensibility with a faith in the other and in the redemptive power of forgiveness. Within the beauty and strangeness of this work rests an imperative that captures the directive of poetry at its best: "Present yourself / in the full radiance of captivation." In its mystery and defiance, Robert Fernandez's collection does precisely this. An online reader's companion will be available at robertfernandezsite.wesleyan.edu.
Scarecrow
When for a Moment
It Would Be Better If You Tasted Rain
We Adorn
If I Offend You with My Leniency
The Dauphin
A Vein of Earth
After Antonioni's La Notte
Pack
Lost Time
Sing Again
Rogue Estates
Your Loves Travel and Stand
Bantams
And
So Strange Arrangements
All the Deadly Ones
The Dog
The Ground Beneath
The Leaning
Flags
Full Day
Ad Absurdum
Bruckner Grew Up among Weevils
Dayrun
Those You Live Among
In Winter with Starred Standards
The Blood Desires Nakedness of Every Sort
Crowns
Then from the Bronze World
Vincent
Of Listening and Patient Work
How Could I Have Clipped So Near
They Remember My Name
What Tree Does Give
We Are Elsewhere
Who Makes a Chorus of You Here
Tasso
Fêtes
You Are Not Here
We Challenge
Where You Hunt, Your Blood Goes Cold
Softly the Day Stands
I Want to Die Better
Which Chatters Beauty
Every Horned Wayfarer
Thanatos
Again
Acknowledgments
ROBERT FERNANDEZ is the author of We Are Pharaoh and Pink Reef and the cotranslator of Azure: Poems Stéphane Mallarmé. He has won a Gertrude Stein Award for Innovative Poetry and a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. He lives in Lincoln, Nebraska.
"Fernandez imbues his dark third collection with omens, mortality panic, and a Rimbaud-esque frenzied bleakness, punctuating the work with moments of desperate hope. Packing poems with Gothic details that produce a visceral reaction ... Fernandez pivots between sinister and debauched revelry, 'portents dissolving like fat'... His dexterity is best displayed in creating and sustaining a mood of ardent desperation heightened by reverent pleas for perseverance– continuing on 'through the night,/through morning,/ again again again'."
~Publishers Weekly
""Fernandez imbues his dark third collection with omens, mortality panic, and a Rimbaud-esque frenzied bleakness, punctuating the work with moments of desperate hope. Packing poems with Gothic details that produce a visceral reaction Fernandez pivots between sinister and debauched revelry, 'portents dissolving like fat' His dexterity is best displayed in creating and sustaining a mood of ardent desperation heightened by reverent pleas for perseverance– continuing on 'through the night,/through morning,/ again again again'.""
~Publishers Weekly
""All of this, really, should be a concrete argument in favor of becoming a reader of Robert Fernandez's work. For his welcome complexity, his inescapable earnestness, and his felt sentiment. I find myself thinking of this book as an opportunity to further develop how or what would allow me to understand Robert Fernandez's voice, as well as the voices of other poets who continue to hold a conversation with the world. And what a distinct pleasure it is to view into that world.""
~Kent Shaw, Colorado Review
"Condensed in this refined language are expressions of unprecedented excess, rudeness, violence, and free thinking. The effect is a kind of gothic architecture, where the thing contained feels bigger than its container, and strains against it. If more poets wrote like Fernandez, we might be living in a golden age."
~Aaron Kunin, author of Cold Genius
"Scarecrow finds and makes beauty in and out of precisely what is and nothing more: 'May you spin / here, scarecrow, among / the other straw-like things / planted in the dark earth, / swollen with light and time.' It is a book that does not adorn the human condition, but discovers and reveals the adornments fundamental to it.""
~Shane McCrae, author of Mule
"Robert Fernandez's incantatory poetry taps into the vatic hum of the earth. His Scarecrow, as human effigy, calls out the predicament of the self at the end of history. He speaks in the dialect of deep time.""
~Andrew Joron, author of Trance Archive