| William
Carlos Williams writes, “There is a constant
barrier between the reader and his consciousness
of immediate contact with the world. If there
is an ocean it is here. Or rather, the whole
world is between: Yesterday, tomorrow, Europe,
Asia, Africa,—all things removed and
impossible.”
Anderson goes “overboard” into
this ocean. She scrutinizes our awareness of
contact, esp. of the processes contributing
to locality, geographies, cities, address.
By extension, going overboard is a method of
travel, from a surface, through air, to water
or somewhere else. These poems are of the air,
of the time spent considering the water and
where we want to be. They work with a fusion
of discursiveness and discontinuity that seems
paradoxical and unlike anybody else.
Beth Anderson’s first book,The Habitable
World (Instance Press, 2001), was a finalist
for the Poetry Society of America’s Norma
Farber First Book Award. Her poems have appeared
in New American Writing, The Germ, Barrow
Street, The Best American Poetry of 2003, and An
Anthology of New (American) Poets (Talisman House, 1998).
She is an editor of Subpress, a cooperative
small press publisher of poetry.
“With their gorgeous locutions and turns,
their heady breath, Anderson’s poems
haunt, inhabit, and conjure the world.”
—Peter
Gizzi
“
Anderson is a master of the syntactic measure,
blending novelistic and essayistic tones with
first-person statements that retain a cool
observational air without ever feeling aloof...”
—Steve
Evans, Notes to Poetry [2002-03]
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