Book details

My Poems Won't Change the World

Selected Poems

Author: Patrizia Cavalli; Edited by Gini Alhadeff

My Poems Won't Change the World

My Poems Won't Change the World

$27.00

Trade Paperback

About This Book

At last, an ample English-language selection of one of contemporary poetry's most vibrant voices

Any hall she has ever read her poetry in is invariably filled to the gills....

Page Count
304
On Sale
09/09/2014

Book Details

At last, an ample English-language selection of one of contemporary poetry's most vibrant voices

Any hall she has ever read her poetry in is invariably filled to the gills. Women like her, girls like her, and men like her, too. In Italy, Patrizia Cavalli is as beloved as Wistawa Szymborska is in Poland, and if Italy were Japan she'd be designated a national treasure. The Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben said of Cavalli that she has written "the most intensely ‘ethical' poetry in Italian literature of the twentieth century." One could add that it is, easily, also the most sensual and comical. Though Cavalli has been widely translated into German, French, and Spanish, My Poems Won't Change the World is her first substantial American anthology.
The book is made up of poems from Cavalli's collections published by Einaudi from 1974 to 2006, now freshly translated by an illustrious group of American poets, some of them already familiar with her work: Mark Strand, Jorie Graham, Jonathan Galassi, Rosanna Warren, Geoffrey Brock, J. D. McClatchy, and David Shapiro. Gini Alhadeff's translations, which make up half the book, are the result of a five-year collaboration with Cavalli.
This edition includes the original Italian language poems alongside the English translation.

Imprint Publisher

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

ISBN

9780374534790

In The News

“A must-read for fans of contemporary poetry.” —Diego Báez, Booklist

“How invigorating to have so much poetry by Patrizia Cavalli now available in English . . . The psychological insight informing these lines is stunning . . . Cavalli's love poetry, which formulates such complex psychological realities in limpid everyday language, often gives pause like this. Her verse is also sensual in refined ways . . . This generous representative selection deserves many thoughtful readers, for who has not herself or himself been sometimes lost in what Cavalli calls ‘il buio dell'amore,' ‘the dark of love'?” —John Taylor, The Arts Fuse

“It may seem like an odd assemblage of voices, but Cavalli's lines sound seamless no matter who is doing the translating, and her keen wit carries through, unhindered by irony. In ‘The Keeper,' her dazzling poem sequence, an allegory on poetic craft and sexual love, she writes, ‘it wasn't science, it was devotion.' She was referring to opening locked doors, but I took the phrase to be the essence of her poetry, one which transcends the rudimentary physics of gender, genre or language.” —J. Mae Barizo, Hyperallergic

“I've known this fascinating woman for forty years. Look at her closely: it's as if you were seeing Sappho in the flesh. Her simple, mysterious words are the lyrics to a stormy, romantic opera whose plot we half-intuit but never fully understand. This is the phenomenology of desire.” —Edmund White, A Boy's Own Story and The Beautiful Room is Empty

“Like Emerson, Patrizia Cavalli says the same thing over and over, and each time it is amazingly fresh and surprising. The world does change, in the telling.” —John Ashbery

“Reading Patrizia Cavalli is nothing short of ecstasy. She conjures the witty eroticism of Catullus, the purity of haiku. She articulates, with disarming precision, the instabilty, the absurdity, the exquisite anguish of love. Perhaps her poems can't change the world, but they have changed my life.” —Jhumpa Lahiri, author of The Namesake and Interpreter of Maladies

“From the first time I read Patrizia Cavalli's work--over 20 years ago--I was struck by how fresh and original her poems were. No one else could weave so much humanity in so few lines--alternately funny, savage, heartbreaking, and painfully wise. She earns the rarest compliment for a poet--she is irresistible.” —Dana Gioia, author of Can Poetry Matter? and Pity the Beautiful

About the Creators

My Poems Won't Change the World

My Poems Won't Change the World

$27.00

Trade Paperback