How do we discover our deepest desires, those that at once elude and define us? In "Erotikon," award-winning poet Susan Mitchell invites us to make that discovery — and in the process, to understand our true selves. In language both staggeringly beautiful and wonderfully mischevious, Mitchell explores the primal, transformative power of our sexual appetites. Drawing us in like a lover through her sensual world, she moves from seduction to surrender to symbiosis and the ultimate communion we long for in our lives on earth.
How do we discover our deepest desires, those that at once elude and define us In Erotikon, award-winning poet Susan Mitchell invites us to make that discovery - and in the process, to understand our true selves. In language both staggeringly beautiful and wonderfully mischevious, Mitchell explores the primal , transformative power of our sexual appetites. Drawing us in like a lover through her sensual world, she moves from seduction to surrender to symbiosis and the ultimate communion we long for in our lives on earth.
Susan Mitchell has won many awards for her poetry includiSusan Mitchell has won many awards for her poetry includiSusan Mitchell has won many awards for her poetry includiSusan Mitchell has won many awards for her poetry includiSusan Mitchell has won many awards for her poetry including fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, theng fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, theng fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, theng fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, theng fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Gu
""Erotikon" is a superb book. Its language is a kind of Joycean undersong of desire. A brash, beautiful, voluptuous innerness seems suddenly everywhere visible as if we were witnessing the soul's dark love becoming'coming into---a body of work. It is a book of ecstatic awakenings, feverish enactments of appetite, relentless and ravishing. I know of no book like it. None that combines the pitch and fervor of erotic yearning with such exquisite boldness, none that makes so lavish and clear a case for the wisdom of excess."-- Mark Strand"We expect a lyric poet to remain sufficient to her occasions: she must strike and strike anew, and when no longer new, still resolved to be lyric, by which we mean something like a stab or a sting (as Susan Mitchell so characteristically confronted us in earlier collections, ecstatic and sorrowing and ecstatic again). The maker of lyric wrote Mitchell's poems, let us say, but the maker of "Erotikon" writes poetry, as unexampled process, meditative and commemorative and perilous, as experience has peril at its root: rhapsody reinvented, as it must be, lyric still but historical too--how the body keeps giving it away, profligate, the ease of it--revealing even as Mitchell erases, overcoming even as she retreats. One must 'retreat' with her at least as far as Hopkins to account for the achieve of, the mastery of the thing! Stirred for a bird, indeed: here are the lineaments of a genial intelligence, a giant art!"-- Richard Howard"Melifluous. . . .Mitchell's explorations of the limits of language produce interesting results."-- "New York Times Book Review