Skip to main content
Trade Books For Courses Tradebooks for Courses

Song of Songs

A Poem

Sylvie Baumgartel

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

opens in a new window
opens in a new window Song of Songs Download image

ISBN10: 0374539073
ISBN13: 9780374539078

Trade Paperback

80 Pages

$19.00

CA$26.00

Request Desk Copy
Request Exam Copy

TRADE BOOKS FOR COURSES NEWSLETTER

Sign up to receive information about new books, author events, and special offers.

Sign up now

Sometimes I like to feel sexy. Sometimes I don’t. Sometimes I like to be very plain. Invisible almost, hiding in plain sight. I want to hide and to be found.

In the spirit of the biblical Song of Solomon, Sylvie Baumgartel’s Song of Songs takes the subjects of love and worship, and brings them to the desperate, wild spaces of domestic life. With a voice at once precise and oneiric, Baumgartel explores the landscapes of sex and desire, power and submission, in this groundbreaking book-length poem that forces us to question the bounds of devotion. An ambitious and vivid debut, Song of Songs is a work of breathtaking honesty, couched in language few of us are brave enough to speak aloud.

Reviews

Praise for Song of Songs

"The conventional power dynamics of heterosexual love appear in grotesque extremity ('I want to live forever chained at your feet'), but Sylvie’s wit and charm make them more farcical than troubling. The result is a study of devotion and a celebration of the rewards that come from loving with abandon."The New Yorker

"Baumgartel dodges nothing; instead, in a superheroic move, she grabs the bullet from air thick with tradition and history and swallows it whole . . . her language doubles back and takes up space without apology—a radical act for a femme-presenting speaker when so often women and nonbinary people are forced to be quiet, to be small. Paired with identity, the poem's extremity becomes a political act."—Kate O'Donoghue, The Rumpus

Reviews from Goodreads

About the author

Sylvie Baumgartel

Sylvie Baumgartel lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Her poems have appeared in The Paris Review, The Nation, The New York Review of Books, Subtropics, Raritan, Harvard Review, and The Unprofessionals: New American Writing from “The Paris Review”.