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Through branching clauses of off-kilter syntax, Graham Foust makes poetry in Nightingalelessness from the common stuff of conversations, including the ones bouncing around in our heads. "If you think you've seen it all you've seen one thing." By observation and direct address, these poems surge forward as a way to retreat and reflect. They concern what Keats calls "the weariness, the fever, and the fret" of adulthood, the weight of time, when the music has stopped. Yet in the syncopation of action against uncertainty, thought against belief, Foust uncovers a wobbly new music.
Graham Foust lives in Colorado and works at the University of Denver. He has published nine books of his own poetry, as well as four volumes translated (with Samuel Frederick) from the German poet Ernst Meister.
"In this haunting, meditative collection, poet and translator Foust (Time Down to Mind) further sharpens his focus on the limitations of language as a means of exploring memory and time. He couches his linguistic sleuthings within a broader exploration of mortality that raises the stakes . . . The collection is imbued with both gravitas and grace, mirroring the anxieties of contemporary existence while also accepting them."
~Publishers Weekly