About the Book
In Anthony Carelli's remarkable debut, Carnations, the poems attempt to reanimate dead metaphors as blossoms: wild and lovely but also fleeting, mortal, and averse to the touch. Here, the poems are carnations, not only flowers, but also body-making words. Nodding to influences as varied as George Herbert, Francis Ponge, Fernando Pessoa, and D. H. Lawrence, Carelli asserts that the poet's materials--words, objects, phenomena--are sacred, wilting in the moment, yet perennially renewed. Often taking titles from a biblical vocabulary, Carnations reminds us that unremarkable places and events--a game of Frisbee in a winter park, workers stacking panes in a glass factory, or the daily opening of a cafe--can, in a blink, be new. A short walk home is briefly transformed into a cathedral, and the work-worn body becomes a dancer, a prophet, a muse. ______ From Carnations: THE PROPHETS Anthony Carelli A river. And if not the river nearby, then a dream of a river. Nothing happens that doesn't happen along a river, however humble the water may be.
Take Rowan Creek, the trickle struggling to lug its mirroring across Poynette, wherein, suspended, so gentle and shallow, I learned to walk, bobbing at my father's knees. Later, whenever we tried to meander on our inner tubes, we'd get lodged on the bottom. Seth, remember, no matter how we'd kick and shove off, we'd just get lodged again? At most an afternoon would carry us a hundred feet toward the willows. We'd piss ourselves on purpose just to feel the spirits of our warmth haloing out. And once, two bald men on the footbridge, bowing in the sky, stared down at us without a word.
Table of Contents:
The Sabbath 1 Glass Work Song 3 The Prophets 6 The Muse 7 The Crusades 10 The Builder 12 The Collar 13 The Apostles 16 Discernment 18 The Chance 19 In Ordinary Time 20 October Advent 21 The Begats 23 The Shepherd 27 Lectio Divina 28 The Hours 30 Agnus Dei 32 The Brooklyn Heavens 35 Evangelical 36 Birthday 38 Sermon 40 Original Sin 41 Faith 42 Incarnation 43 No, Euripides 46 Yahweh 47 Apples for Thoreau 48 Jerusalem 50 The Crucifixion 51 The Lord's Prayer 52 The Disciples 54 Sure 55 Amen 57
About the Author :
Anthony Carelli was raised in Poynette, Wisconsin, and studied at the University of Wisconsin-Madison before completing an MFA in poetry at New York University. His poems have appeared in various magazines, including the "New Yorker". He lives in Brooklyn, New York. This is his first book.
Review :
Finalist for the 2012 Levis Reading Prize, Virginia Commonwealth University "There is no poem entitled Carnations in Carelli's first collection. But affection is its master mood, the affection of a vital young man for the world of his experience... They're real experiences, conducive to mixed feelings, yet Carelli writes of them in language so enlivening and fresh that they become blessings, which may be why most of the poems have churchly and theological titles."--Ray Olson, Booklist "Carnations pays homage to the poet's masters and ushers in an exciting new talent... [T]his wonderful collection is as good a guide as they get."--Piotr Florczyk, On the Seawall blog "Readers may fervently wish that this promisingly talented writer never quits his day job, as warming student egos in classrooms might possibly prove less inspirational than pies in Brooklyn."--Benjamin Ivry, Newark Star-Ledger "I picked up Anthony Carelli's Carnations, a first collection, not expecting to linger but curious, not least because Princeton's outstanding contemporary poets series, edited by Paul Muldoon, is reliably unpredictable. And as soon as I had started, I was charmed... He is able to write in a way that allows for the sublime and the absurd to come together. But Carelli's free-flowering humour never distracts from his purpose and the ending is masterly."--The Observer (Poetry Book of the Month) "This is a magnificent book... Ooh! God bless these poems!"--Raphael Allison, Rain Taxi Review of Books "[W]arm, conversational and colloquial."--Keith Richmond, Tribune