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22 jun 2005

Another revewing template is "Reading [name of poet] is like being high on [name of illegal substance] while attempting to [difficult activity requiring alertness and manual dexterity]." A close cousin of the "Rod Smith is like Frank O'Hara on [name of illegal substance]" trope.

I'll show you how it works:

When you read lines like these

"Your pomegranates have rocked my magenta swirl
of a world, like icicles on a bad hair day..."

you feel like you have just awakened from a dream in which all the Jackson Pollocks in MOMA have been replaced by replicas of glam-rock wigs. The effect is a bit disconcerting at first, but, once you realize it's only a dream, you feel immensely grateful for the experience. Trying to read this book is like knitting a sweater for a very large grandson while coming off a bad LSD trip, and then realizing that you have no grandchildren.

4 comentarios:

  1. laughing b/c that sounds like a book i'd like to read.

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  2. Sounds like a few books I actually did read.

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  3. We've all read those books, and those reviews of them in which the reviewer tries to to echo those mixed metaphors in the poems themselves.

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  4. That pomegranate line rawqued my whirled thank you very much!

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