Available Formats
The New World: Infinitesimal Epics
By (Author) Anthony Carelli
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
22nd November 2021
United States
Paperback
80
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
From an uncommonly fluent and rewarding poet (The Observer), a collection of miniature epics that asks: can grace be found amid disarray
The New World, Anthony Carellis new collection of poems, is an American travelogue that unfolds in a series of darkly comic episodes, with allusions to Dante as a thread throughout. In these epics in miniature, we meet a pilgrim-poet as he awaits the arrival of his child, a would-be Columbus, on the shores of a land disenstoried by explorers present and past. Its a land and a people largely lost in mindscapes and mythscapes, haunted by sketchy aspirational visions, misbegotten misremembering, and emptiness. Nonetheless, the poet steps out to the shore to sing for the childand readerto do what Columbus never did: land gently. / And listen and / listen and listen / and stay. Constantly unsettling the rhetoric of inherited forms, the poet shaping these poems is always bound to the pilgrim, who cannot pretend to dissolve our purgatories but can only invite usas a latter-day Virgil woulddeeper into the uncanny encounters that encircle us. From an Arizona nursing home and a grandmother's memory of a stolen golden Schwinn in the occupied Philippines, to a tale of road-tripping west through Pennsylvania as sunrise transpires in the wrong sky, The New World opens strange spaces for us to re-see, lament, and re-sing the stories we tell.
Anthony Carellis first book of poems, Carnations (Princeton), was a finalist for the Levis Reading Prize. His poems have appeared in the New Yorker, Commonweal, and many other publications. The recipient of a Hodder Fellowship and a Whiting Award, he teaches at New York University and lives in Brooklyn, New York.