4
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
Babel (Pitt Poetry Series)
by Barbara Hamby
Sponsored
Synopsis
Babel features more of the rhetorical acrobatics that fueled Barbara Hamby's earlier work. These whirlwinds of words and sounds form vistas, images, and scenes that are at once unique and immediately recognizable.
In poems such as “Six, Sex, Say,” she displays a linguistic bravado that moves ...
In poems such as “Six, Sex, Say,” she displays a linguistic bravado that moves ...
Babel features more of the rhetorical acrobatics that fueled Barbara Hamby's earlier work. These whirlwinds of words and sounds form vistas, images, and scenes that are at once unique and immediately recognizable.
In poems such as “Six, Sex, Say,” she displays a linguistic bravado that moves effortlessly through translations, cognates, and homonyms. This love of words permeates the poems, from the husband wooing his future wife “with a barrage of words so cunningly fluent, / so linguistically adroit” in “Flesh, Bone, and Red,” to the alphabetic sampler woven from memory and love in “Ode on My Mother's Handwriting.”
Hamby's poems drift across histories and continents, from early writing and culture in Mesopotamia through the motion-picture heaven that seems so much like Paris, to odes on such thoroughly American subjects as hardware stores, bubblegum, barbecue, and sharp-tongued cocktail waitresses giving mandatory pre-date quizzes to lawyers and “orangutans in the guise of men.” As Booklist noted in reviewing her previous collection, Hamby's poems “are tsunamis carrying you far out to sea and then back to shore giddy and glad to be alive.”
You May Also Like
Classics Picks
View All
Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman's OpenAI
Karen Hao
The Magnificent Lives of Marjorie Post
Allison Pataki
Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty
Anderson Cooper
The Great Resistance: The 400-Year Fight to End Slavery in the Americas
Carrie Gibson
The Color Purple
Alice Walker
Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection
John Green