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author interview
sample
poems:
Apollo
Consoling My Friend, after
Her Death
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Rift
Poems by Barbara Helfgott Hyett
The
ring, Apollo & Daphne, the flesh, dura mater
Barbara Helfgott Hyett's new collection considers,
from close and afar, the elemental forces coming to bear on
human character in our time. In one sense a personal explication
of a long marriage and its betrayal, these stunning poems
take solace in nature's steadfastness, and in the prospect
of a newly resilient self, awakened to the predicament of
a battered world.
The title poem spills across the face of history—9/11,
Hiroshima, the harrowing geological formation of earth, the
sudden appearance of cave art, and ultimately, the uncertainty
of God. The Daphne and Apollo sequence invents fourteen
speakers, including a chisel, a river god, the sculptor, Bernini,
and the poet, Ovid, each telling his own story as together
they deconstruct the longstanding myth of lust gone awry.
Such is the imaginative, kaleidoscopic process of Rift, in
which acts of observation shatter and shift our view of experience.
While we ache for the loss in these poems, Helfgott Hyett
risks such honest grief that redemption comes, free standing
and moral, on its own.
“Barbara
Helfgott Hyett’s poems reflect both her anguish and
her fervor; their warmth elevates the reader to spiritual
heights.”
—Elie Wiesel, Nobel Laureate and author of Night
“Helfgott Hyett’s poems about love, infidelity
and the body in all its guises are tough, tender, and juicy.”
—Maxine Kumin, author of Still to Mow, Poems
“Barbara
Helfgott Hyett’s Rift is a book born of acute
psychic necessity and there is not a trifle or bauble in it.
. . . Faced with the annihilation of the life she has known,
Helfgott Hyett employs her imagination, her learning, and
her poetic virtuosity to search among biblical and mythic
narratives, arctic expeditions, memories, meteor showers,
classical and romantic art, and history for a way forward.
This book is that way, a profound gift to all of us. The title
sequence is itself a major work, a rich, polyvocal, unflinching
vision of the world we live in now."
—Richard Hoffman, author of Half the House,
Without Paradise, and Gold Star Road
“Helfgott Hyett takes up the theme of loss, specifically
the break-up of a long marriage, in poems that are direct
and detailed, with a power rooted in restraint and compression.
Her imagery is clear and often surprising, as in these opening
lines: ‘He rises slowly, so as/ not to wake her. An
ox is/ that careful as it tears the grasses . . . ’
She captures each moment with precision, her ear for dialogue
unerring, as in these lines: ‘She lay her face on his
thighs./ . . . He patted her hair/ . . . Poor you, he told
the top of her head./His boat shoes were tapping/the cabinet.
It was all/he could do not to run.’ These poems, wrung
from grief, anger, and disillusionment, return again and again
to an affirmation of the hard work of living."
—Ellen Bass, author of Courage to Heal and
The Human Line
Barbara Helfgott Hyett is a cofounder of
the Writer's Room of Boston and is currently the director
of POEMWORKS: The Workshop for Publishing Poets. She has taught
at Boston University, MIT, and Harvard University. The author
of four collections of poetry including The Tracks We
Leave, Poems on Endangered Wildlife of North America,
and The Double Reckoning of Christopher Columbus,
she has worked as a visiting poet in schools all over Massachusetts.
Her programs with students, teachers, and families include
reading and writing workshops in childhood memory, parenting,
and watchfulness
February
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, 80 pages
$16.00 paper
ISBN 978-1-55728-865-3 | 1-55728-865-8
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