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Learn to Love Explosives Geoffrey Woolf
Learn to Love Explosives
Geoffrey Woolf
Poetry. If you were to listen to a middle-aged Holden Caulfield, you might hear a voice like the one in Geoff Woolf's gut-punchingly funny and irreverently honest poems. Like Salinger's young protagonist, the speaker in these prose poems has no patience for phony Americans, such as a mountain climber being interviewed on TV: the way he kept saying the names of these companies that make his equipment I bet they pay him to blab like that. Later in the same poem, the speaker admits that he, too, might be bought for the right price: even though I'm pretty much a coward I have a feeling that there's this certain amount of dollars that would make me brave as shit too. The chatty vernacular--spare of unnecessary punctuation--echoes an American idiom as familiar as the Midwestern landscape where these poems dwell. Here, you might enter a tavern where God occasionally hangs out to stuff quarters in a jukebox or to play a divinely rigged game of pool, strong-arming patrons with bullish omnipotence. As these poems lead you to uncanny places, remember what the speaker says: Sometimes when a mime is making me uncomfortable and claustrophobic I have to remind myself that it was his choice to get in that imaginary box in the first place. Don't get me wrong. These poems aren't like a mime's make-believe box, but their uncanny nature challenges you to question your certainties. Woolf wields a fierce and genuine wit against flim-flam hopes, and his poems bring laughter and discomfort in equal measure.--Murray Shugars
| Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
| Released | January 10, 2016 |
| ISBN13 | 9781939929488 |
| Publishers | DOS Madres Press |
| Pages | 64 |
| Dimensions | 152 × 222 × 6 mm · 137 g (Weight (estimated)) |
| Language | English |
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