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"Laux writes gritty, tough, lyrical poems that depict the actual nature of life in the West today."―Philip Levine The narrative poems in Dorianne Laux's fifth collection charge through the summer of love, where Vietnam casts a long shadow, and into the present day, where she compassionately paints the smoky bars, graffiti, and addiction of urban life. Laux is "continually engaging and, at her best, luminous" (San Diego Union-Tribune). from "To Kiss Frank," make out with him a bit, this is what my friend would like to do oh these too many dead summers later, and as much as I want to stroll with her into the poet's hazy fancy all I can see is O'Hara's long gone lips fallen free of the bone, slumbering beneath the grainy soil.
Dorianne Laux is a poet whose works have risen to the height of popularity since her first collection, "Awake" was published in 1990. Known for the honesty with which she portrays the hard but often beautiful truths of everyday life, Laux is far more than a confessional poet who writes about personal experience, as some critics have labeled her. She is a multi-faceted observational poet, populist poet, erotic poet, and nature poet, just to name a few. This breadth of subject matter has always characterized her work, as Laux writes candidly about all aspects of life using powerful diction and poignant lyricism, without crossing into the realm of sentimentality. In her latest book, "The Book of Men," we see the same style that has come to characterize Laux's work shine through, as she uses the subject of men as a springboard to capture the imperfection of humanity with a compassionate eye.The first section of the book begins with sixteen poems, each about a different man, mythical or actual. Some poems also deal with the topic of men at large thematically. Laux succeeds at achieving razor sharp clarity with her powerful imagery, playful language, and surprising metaphors. In "Mick Jagger" she writes of the singer: "If you turn off the sound he's a ruminating bovine/a baby's face tasting his first sour orange or spitting spooned oatmeal out./Rugose cheeks and beef/jerky jowls." This sort of humor infuses the collection and keeps it engaging throughout. Despite "The Book of Men's" playfulness, each of its poems also holds a simple and striking truth. This is Laux at her best, juxtaposing humor and solemnity. At the end of "Late-Night TV," for instance, a poem recounting a narrator watching a late-night infomercial man, Laux writes: "Somewhere in the universe is a palace/ where each of us is imprinted with a map,/the one path seared into the circuits of our brains./It signals us to turn left at the green light,/right at the dead tree./We know nothing of how it all works,/how we end up in one bed or another,/speak one language instead of others,/what heat draws us to our life's work/or keeps us from a dream until it's nothing/but a blister we scratch in our sleep."In the second section of the collection, Laux expands beyond poems only about men to write about subjects as diverse as Cher, the color gold, and the beauty of people's backs. A master observer, Laux adeptly captures the small details which bring these poems to life: "Cher/tall as a glass of iced tea,/her bony shoulders draped...rouged cheek bones and her/throaty panache/her voice of gravel and clover." "The Book of Men" celebrates the beauty of human imperfection, of both men and women.Fans of Laux's work will not be disappointed. "The Book of Men" skips the "big things" and focuses on the small, over-looked, and in-between moments of life, setting up the human being as a tiny blip against a huge backdrop. The same intense imagery, non-judgmental voice, blend of comedy and seriousness, and stories about everyday life that are hallmarks of her previous collections are present here. However, "In the Book of Men," Laux achieves a level of precision with her language like never before. With its tight language and piercing clarity, this latest collection is Laux's crowning achievement. She states in the poem "Mine Own Phil Levine": "poetry was precision, raw precision/Truth and compassion: genius." If this is the case, then this is the most real poetry Laux has ever penned, as well as the most ingenious.