Love Language
By (Author) Nasser Hussain
Coach House Books
Coach House Books
2nd January 2024
Canada
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)
821.92
Paperback
80
Width 127mm, Height 203mm, Spine 7mm
In his follow-up to SKY WRI TEI NGS, Nasser Hussain tackles the absurdity of the English language
The title of Love Language can be read at least three ways: as an imperative, as the signoff to a letter, and as a contemporary way of talking about relationship styles. None of these would be wrong.
In his followup to the acclaimed SKY WRI TEI NGS, which used only the language of airport codes, Nasser Hussain moves toward a more expansive version of experimentation; in a time of physical lockdown, his pandemic poetics refuse to be confined. And so we have poems that repeat and hypnotize as English becomes more and more absurd, that compare an affair to a relationship with Apple, that list love poems the poet loves. Through it all we see a deep affection for our language, and for the ways that language lets us talk about love.
"Think of 'time as a lantern,' suggests Nasser Hussain, in these inimitable poems that take play seriously and allow seriousness to enter the room disguised as incantation. These are poems that long to dismiss the lyrics most recent pretty mask of polite propriety and instead take us to the lyrics ancient roots. It started way back, the poet says, 'when a cave person made a grunt,' to speak the name of a thing. Indeed. This is the lyrics ancient pact with the world: to spin playful language into seriousness of giving things their nameswhat are we without this speaking, this tune Hussain knows this and writes beautiful poemsand I, for one, am grateful." Ilya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic
The Garden of Eden, it turns out, is always just a layover away. Sam Anderson,New York Times MagazineonSKY WRI TEI NGS
Nasser Hussain is a Lecturer in Literature and Creative Writing at Leeds Beckett University in the UK. His first book, boldface was published in 2014. He holds a PhD in English from the University of York (UK), an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Windsor and a BA in English from Queens University.
Nasser has had a number of occupations: treeplanter, wilderness guide, amateur restaurateur, and now academic and poet. He likes his new job best. For him, poems are best described as language with a pattern, and much of his recent practice takes pleasure in finding new patterns to wonder at.He currently lives in Sheffield, UK.