Gatekeeper: Poems
By (Author) Patrick Johnson
Milkweed Editions
Milkweed Editions
26th December 2019
United States
General
Non Fiction
811.6
Winner of Ballard Spahr Prize for Poetry 2019 (United States)
Paperback
96
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
Book's engagement with internet culture, the dark web, and digital saturation provides opportunities for wider coverage and crossover into larger markets Winner of the eighth annual $10,000 Ballard Spahr Prize for Poetry, selected by Khaled Mattawa, editor of Michigan Quarterly Review We expect strong blurbs from acclaimed poets like Mary Jo Bang
Fragmented and fractured, Johnson pushes this book to its structural limits--and the result is a successfully jarring and disturbing collection. This is a book of the internet, and of our internal selves: of pursuit, lust, and a closing into the spirit. --The Millions
Impressive and formally versatile . . . 'The individual becomes invisible, ' [Johnson] observes, positioning the reader as collaborator and co-conspirator in this thought-provoking collection.--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Gatekeeper is a book for the age of the cloud, a volume of poetry that is at once novelistic and intensely lyrical. Armed with Plato and Agamben and writing in a pliable style that suits his book's various tones and narrative turns, Patrick Johnson probes the changing nature of selfhood in our time, how we've become utterly unknowable and vulnerably exposed, and how the body and its desires and yearnings are reeled toward something that only be described as oneself. Gatekeeper stands out for its focus, suspense, and intense interrogation of its subject matter. A deeply engaging and intelligent book, and a thoroughly enjoyable one."--Khaled Mattawa
"This is an odyssey into the dark recess of the internet. Johnson's speaker traverses the deepest horrors of the dark web, beasts that shouldn't and wouldn't have a platform if it wasn't for the digital cage we have built for them . . . Our narrator desperately tries to maintain his sanity as a computerized reality begins to eclipse human sensibilities . . . This collection of startlingly unforgiving prose serves as a reminder and a warning of what we are allowing ourselves to become the further we move into the haunted cosmos of the internet. Selected by Khaled Mattawa as the winner of the 2019 Ballard Spahr Prize for Poetry, Gatekeeper feels like a socially relevant distress signal, something to be enjoyed for its beauty but also respected for the size of its teeth."--Aime Keeble, Main Street Books (NC)
"In Patrick Johnson's unsettling debut collection, Gatekeeper, we are taken into the online world of the dark web, where we watch as individuals seek out community despite the inherent facelessness of the platform. In these poems our nameless guide encounters another being known only as Anon, who in time past Emily Dickinson might have referred to simply as 'Master.' Observes our guide, 'I have no sense of what's at stake for me / The half-life of love et cetera.' As Johnson ultimately proves, the limits on vulnerability are self-imposed and result in our deepest woundings. Gatekeeper unnerves even as it shines."--Amy Quan Barry
"Gatekeeper's subject is the permeable self, at once virtual and visceral. Patrick Johnson gathers shards of experience--online and off--into an unsettled and exceedingly contemporary portrait of love, obsession, danger, death, voyeurism, anxiety, guilt, paranoia, loneliness, and connection. Discarding the usual easy (and false) divisions, this is a book that expands outward as it stares deep within."--Edward McPherson
"These fascinating poems rest on the assumption that each of us has two selves: one that occupies space in the 'real' world and another that exists only in a movie that plays continuously at the back of our minds. With our hands on a computer keyboard, we have a third, cyborg, self. The poetic enactment of the splitting of these multiple selves is mesmerizing."--Mary Jo Bang
Patrick Johnson earned his MFA in poetry at Washington University in St. Louis and completed his undergraduate at University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is currently studying to become a physician assistant, and lives in Madison.