SourceSource
This bold wide-ranging new collection -- Mark Doty's sixth book of poems -- demonstrates the unmistakable lyricism, fierce observation and force of feeling that have made his poetry significant to readers on both sides of the Atlantic.
The new poems in Source deepen Doty's exploration of the paradox of selfhood. Are we edgeless and unbounded, or locked within our own singularity? What is it to be one person in the world's great multiplicity of selves?
Source investigates matters of public life -- the degradation of Walt Whitman's vision of a democratic America, a child's display of longing on a New York sidewalk, Provincetown's restless summer crowds. But the poems also turn toward the realm of private struggle, how the self is claimed and lost through desire, how the dapple of light on a hotel windowsill makes a claim for the life of the soul.
Source is a complex, boldly colored selfportrait; its muscular lines argue fiercely with the fact of limit, and pulse with the drama of perception, the quest to forge meaning.
A provocative new collection of poems, examining the paradox of selfhood, provides an intricate self-portrait of the author that follows his vivid search for meaning, argues the fact of limit, and details the drams of perception. 15,000 first printing.
Poems examine the paradox of selfhood, providing a self-portrait of the author that follows his vivid search for meaning.
Title availability
About
Details
- New York : HarperCollins, c2001.
From the community