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Ultramarine Wayne Koestenbaum

Ultramarine By Wayne Koestenbaum

Ultramarine by Wayne Koestenbaum


£13.59
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Ultramarine Summary

Ultramarine by Wayne Koestenbaum

The chromatic, linguistically playful, erotic conclusion to Wayne Koestenbaum's acclaimed trance poem trilogy. Ultramarine distills gleanings from four years of Koestenbaum's trance notebooks (2015-2019) into a series of tightly-sewn collage-poems, filled with desiring bodies, cultural touchstones, and salty memories. Beyond Proust's madeleine we head toward a deli version of utopia, crafted from hamantaschen, cupcake, and cucumber. Interludes in Rome, Paris, and Cologne permit spells of fevered play with Italian, French, and German. Painting and its processes bring bright colors to the surface, as if the poet were trying to figure out anew the nature of blue, pink, orange. Ultramarine reaches across memory, back to Europe, beyond the literal world into dream-habitats conjured through language's occult structures.

Ultramarine Reviews

Whatever his subject-favorites include porn, punctuation and the poetry of Frank O'Hara-the goal is always to jigger logic and language free of its moorings...Ditch your inner chaperone, he implores. Breach the cordon sanitaire in your mind...His great and singular appeal is this fealty to his own desire and imagination...He crushes on evasion and ambiguity, but his own prose has always been distinguished by its tautness and agility...There is a feeling of watching a writer so allergic to cliche now interrogating his own moves, annotating his own cliches with diligent, affectionate exasperation. Figuring it out, after all, is a life sentence. -Parul Sehgal, The New York Times Koestenbaum's writing, like his interests, is diffuse and gymnastic. Cutting a silhouette around white space with his longtime preoccupations of art, desire, form, famous people dead and alive, the work in Figure It Out embodies Lukacs's definition of the essay itself as 'an autonomous and integral giving-of-form to an autonomous and complete life.' It is in the non-pause that Koestenbaum draws a portrait of a consciousness, free and at its most utterly alive. -Tracy O'Neill, BOMB, Editor's Choice Prolific cross-genre author Koestenbaum attempts to 'assemble an/ entire life from found/ scraps in this sequel to 2015's The Pink Trance Notebooks. The stream-of-consciousness form, composed of many very short poems, continues here, congealing into a lengthy work of obsessions and candid ponderings. These fragments and assorted bits of condensed verse reveal a mind wandering from snapshots in a family scrapbook to Sharpie markings at a local glory hole to classical composers. -Publishers Weekly If one asked 'what is the point of poetry?' there would be an infinite number of answers. But Koestenbaum's most recent trance books offer a particularly compelling response: poetry is about facing what you don't want to face and what you've always wanted to face at the same time. -Cody Delistraty, Poetry Foundation

About Wayne Koestenbaum

Wayne Koestenbaum-poet, critic, novelist, artist, performer-has published 21 books, including The Cheerful Scapegoat, Figure It Out, Camp Marmalade, My 1980s & Other Essays, The Anatomy of Harpo Marx, Humiliation, Hotel Theory, Circus, Andy Warhol, Jackie Under My Skin, and The Queen's Throat (nominated for a National Book Critics Circle Award). In 2020 he received an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Literature. His literary archive is at Yale's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. He is a Distinguished Professor of English, French, and Comparative Literature at the City University of New York Graduate Center.

Additional information

NGR9781643621159
9781643621159
1643621157
Ultramarine by Wayne Koestenbaum
New
Paperback
Nightboat Books
20220310
400
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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