The Discarded Life
By (Author) Adam Kirsch
Red Hen Press
Red Hen Press
6th September 2022
United States
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)
811.6
Paperback
56
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
In these moving and meditative poems, Adam Kirsch shows how the experiences and recognitions of early life continue to shape us into adulthood. Richly evoking a 1980s childhood in Los Angeles, Kirsch uses Gen X landmarksfrom Devo to Atari to the Challenger disasterto tell a story of emotional and artistic coming of age, exploring universal questions of meaning, mortality, and how we become who we are.
"Out of memorys dreamlike whoosh, Adam Kirsch fixes scenes of his Californian boyhood in flowing blank verse, holding each cameo up to the light then setting it back down with 'the reckless joy of getting rid.' Most moving are the childs deep misgivings about a world he can only begin to know in fits and starts, the unnerving self-doubt that resolves itself into poetry. This is an artists coming-of-age for the ages. It took my breath away."David Yezzi, author of Black Sea
'There is no I,' writes Adam Kirsch, 'to be born or die.' His new collection takes the stuff of selfhoodmemories, longings, disappointmentsand gives them 'a decent burial in words.' It is an autobiography, a farewell, and a reckoning, best illuminated by his own culminating image of a bonfireor, perhaps, a funeral pyreincinerating the fond vestiges of childhood and adolescence. Each act of disposal is an act of composition, and in these poems, Kirsch composes the years of his life into treasures."Amit Majmudar, author of What He Did in Solitary
"Kirsch writes poetry that is self-effacing but not abject, whose formal audacity is undercut by its sense of perspective. The poets mind, Kirsch seems to suggest, grows when it knows its limits."Anahid Nersessian, The New York Review of Books
Adam Kirsch is a poet and critic whose writing appears regularly in The New Yorker and other publications. He is the author of three previous collections of poetry and several books of criticism and biography, and has received a Guggenheim Fellowship. An editor at the Wall Street Journal, he has taught at Columbia University and Sarah Lawrence College. He was born in Los Angeles and now lives in New York City.