This present moment New poems

Gary Snyder, 1930-

Book - 2015

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Subjects
Published
Berkeley, CA : Counterpoint [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Gary Snyder, 1930- (author)
Physical Description
66 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781619025240
  • Pt.I. Outriders
  • Gnarly
  • The Earth's Wild Places
  • Siberian Outpost
  • Walking the Long and Shady Elwha
  • Charles Freer in a Sierra Snowstorm
  • Why I Take Good Care of My Macintosh
  • Artemis and Pan
  • Anger, Cattle, and Achilles
  • A Letter to M.A. Who Lives Far Away
  • The Names of Actaeon's Hounds
  • Old New Mexican Genetics
  • Polyandry
  • Stages of the End of Night and Coming Day
  • Pt.II. Locals
  • Why California Will Never Be Like Tuscany
  • Sunday
  • Michael des Tombe at the edge of the Canyon the Killigrew Place
  • Chiura Obata's Moon
  • How to Know Birds
  • Starting the Spring Garden and Thinking of Thomas Jefferson
  • Log Truck on the 80
  • Stories in the Night
  • Morning Songs, Goose Lake
  • Fixing the System
  • "reinventing North America"
  • From the Sky
  • Here
  • Pt.III. Ancestors
  • Eiffel Tundra
  • Kill
  • Claws / Cause
  • Hai-en Temple South Korea Home of the Total Tripitaka Set of Printing Blocks
  • Young David in Florence, Before the Kill
  • Mu Ch'i's Persimmons
  • The Bend in the Vlatava
  • The Shrine at Delphi
  • Wildfire News
  • Otzi Crosses Over
  • Seven Brief Poems from Italia
  • Askesis, Praxis, Theoria, of the Wild
  • Pt.IV. Go Now
  • This present moment
Review by Booklist Review

The name of Snyder's book-length, composite poem, Mountains and Rivers without End (1996), also names the existential effect of his poetry. We read it to encounter again where we are: amid the enduring, slow violence of re-creation the mountains adding earth from the planet's core and resolution the rivers eroding the surface. Through Snyder's poetry, we occupy a present moment that, in a paradox that is inalienably human, lives on / to become / long ago. It is a private, though not hidden, moment, so that a poem whose title prepares us for polemic, Fixing the System, turns out to be about a leaky gate-valve in the encompassing context of sea, road, and the topless, bottomless, / empty blue sky. In fact, each of the moments of these poems is completely open, even when, as in the long, particular poem about the death of Snyder's late-life love, Go Now, it resounds with deep personal emotion. The moment of a Snyder poem is the Eternal Now of mindfulness and awareness, a good place to be.--Olson, Ray Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Snyder (Nobody Home), a Zen Buddhist and 1975 Pulitzer Prize winner who has been writing poetry and prose for over 50 years, continues to address themes present in much of his work. He focuses on his travels, the wonders of history, and the environment, all with heavy emphasis on the metaphysical. Snyder lives by the conviction that the "blue sky duomo" is "all the church we'll ever need," and his poems are jocular, yet poignant; in a forest he sees "someone napping with his chainsaw/ after lunch," and while watching squirrels he equates their "wildly horny ferociously aloof" chase to that of Artemis and Pan. In addition to his tributes to nature, he touches upon an ever-surprising variety of subjects: the Eiffel Tower, Michelangelo's "David," Abraham Lincoln, his computer, and polyandry. Of all the poems here, "Go Now," a retelling of his beloved's death, is most likely to evoke a spiritual experience. As Snyder describes her cremation, a harrowing yet beautiful experience, he recalls the fumes as he watched her body disappear, as well as the feeling of eternal love: "This is the price of attachment," he writes, "worth even the smell." Snyder has parceled out the decade since his last poetry collection (Danger on Peaks) into textured poems of a rare and welcome candor. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


I could never be a Muslim, or a Christian, or a Jew because the Ten Commandments fall short of moral vigor. The Bible's "Shalt not kill" leaves out other realms of life, How could that be? What sort of world did they think this is? With no account for all the wriggling feelers and little fins, the spines, the slimy Necks -- eyes shiny in the night -- paw prints in the snow. And that other thing, can't have "no other god before me" -- like, profound anxiety of power and jealousy and envy, what sort of god is that? Worrying all the time? Plenty of little gods are waiting to begin their practice and learn just who they are. Excerpted from This Present Moment: New Poems by Gary Snyder All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.