Solve for Desire: Poems
By (Author) Caitlin Bailey
Milkweed Editions
Milkweed Editions
6th March 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
811.6
Winner of Lindquist & Vennum Prize for Poetry 2017 (United States)
Paperback
96
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
Finalist for the Minnesota Book Award
A debut collection of poems that finds fertile ground in the unknown degree of intimacy, the mysterious and intense relationship, between siblings Georg and Grete Trakl.
Georg Trakl is one of the most celebrated poets of the early twentieth century. Less is known about his sister, Grete: also gifted, also addicted to drugs, and dead by her own hand three years after Georgs overdose. But inSolve for Desireselected by Srikanth Reddy as the winner of the 2017 Lindquist & Vennum Prize for PoetryCaitlin Bailey summons Grete from the shadows. At once sensual and acidic, obsessive and bereft, the Grete of these poems is a fairy-tale sister leaving missives dropped around the city, crumbs / for your ghost.
Can one person be addicted to another Can two souls be twinned, and where does that leave the physical How do we solve for desire when the object we adore disappearsand how does the poet solve and resolve the past, its wounds and its absences Each time I write your name, Bailey writes, a key / turns somewhere in a lock. Like the perfect red burst of poppies and of blood, these poems are a blooming, keening exploration of desire between brother and sister, poet and subject, the living and the dead.
Praise for Solve for Desire
"The speaker of Solve for Desire inserts herself into a sad historical equation--Georg and Grete Trakl's tragic story of trauma, addiction, and suicide--and discovers, through the passage of grief into wonder, an endlessly variable self. 'Perhaps I was a magpie, a songbird. / Perhaps all burden and roar.' Is this Grete speaking from the grave, or is it anyone who's lost a brother, or struggled with dependence, or made music from a broken heart's 'perfect red burst' Solve for Desire is the work of a poet who sings, boldly, across the distances between us. 'I am not afraid of any edge.'"--Srikanth Reddy
"Bailey often delivers short poems like flashes; those can be held in your palm, however mysterious. . . . Her words rest in that curious space between abstraction and touch, so this is a book to place upon one's soul."--The Millions
Bailey takes a sobering look at desire, addiction, loss, and absence in this debut collection of short, lyric poems that are by turns lush and understated, lofty and plainspoken. The work revolves around the intense and ambiguous story of addiction and desire in the lives of turn-of-the-20th-century Austrian siblings and artists Georg and Grete Trakl, poet and painter . . . She performs a kind of feminist resuscitation of the lesser-known Grete, focusing on small moments of quiet, grief, lust, and memory, and fleshing out a story that is still disputed.--Publishers Weekly
This precarious, satisfyingly disjointed debut collection of poetry captures the spirit of the [Trakl] siblings. . . . Bailey's brilliantine lyrics shine brightest when the siblings' characters are wrought in full relief.--Booklist
"In these imagined letters of musical prodigy Grete Trakl to her brother, Austrian poet Georg Trakl, Caitlin Bailey juxtaposes anguished desire with ravishing grief, a charged inner life with the outer world of the early twentieth century. Bailey's imagination and lyricism are astonishing: 'What I would give to be the poppy or else / the black horse, veins laid out like a map / you'd just unfolded . . . The space between our bodies a constellation/ they haven't named yet.' She sings in a voice of dark time, part solace, part warning perhaps: 'It was necessary to become cold. To forget the lives / we'd dreamed of. The days were taut and full of smoke. / Our pockets were mostly empty. We practiced crawling / through progressively smaller holes . . . Every day prepared us / for the next explosion.'"--Patricia Kirkpatrick
"One of poetry's most glorious challenges since its very beginnings--think Sappho--has been to try to 'solve for desire.' Caitlin Bailey's book confronts this sacred task both head on and obliquely. These poems are about and to all of us: the desperation and the glory of desire are both fully present, as well as its underlying mystery. This is a beautiful and important book, absolutely original and deeply courageous."--Jim Moore
Caitlin Bailey pierces the surface of our daily world to expose the real real world of private desire and restraint, in writing that is incantatory and archetypal, at times recalling the Psalms of lament--ancient, strange, and true. These poems make clear that desire heightens perception as much as any drug. 'I wonder / what it would have felt like to have a choice, to choose love, / to hold anything with both hands. It's taken me this long / to say I want I want I want, ' Bailey writes. All of us have felt some form of impossible wanting, 'a tantrum made palatable / only by its alternative, ' but few poets have conveyed the experience as hauntingly. I want to read this book over and over. Caitlin Bailey is a new talent and an old soul.--Katrina Vandenberg
In Solve for Desire, Caitlin Bailey has constructed a world the size of a room the size of a dream. There, she tries obsessively in image and language to work out the was and might-have-been of the pianist Grete Trakl and her brother Georg. The poems are tethered and crowded and sometimes as uncomfortable as a mouth with too many teeth. Do you remember going to a matinee at a movie theater as a child It is that kind of hidden room hidden dream. On exiting, I looked at the world through its scrim.--ireann Lorsung
"In Solve for Desire, Caitlin Bailey attends to the lives of the German modernist poet Georg Trakl and his sister, Grete, with tremendous insight, sympathy, and skill. But this book does something more: Bailey's gift for balancing lyric intensity with narrative inquiry reveals a major new talent."--Peter Campion
Caitlin Bailey has published poems in Prairie Schooner, Haydens Ferry Review, Carolina Quarterly, and elsewhere. She received her MFA from Hamline University and lives in Saint Paul, Minnesota.