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Sight Lines is the tenth poetry collection by Arthur Sze. It was published by Copper Canyon Press in April 9, 2019.[1]

The collection won the 2019 National Book Award for Poetry (USA).[2] Judges of the prize praised Sze's "quiet mastery which generates beautiful, sensuous, inventive, and emotionally rich poems."[3]

Contents

  • "Water Calligraphy"
  • "Stilling to North"
  • "No one"
  • "Westbourne Street"
  • "Cloud Hands"
  • "In the Bronx"
  • "Unpacking a Globe"
  • "During the Cultural Revolution"
  • "Traversal"
  • "The Radiant's"
  • "Doppler Effect"
  • "Adamant"
  • "A woman detonates"
  • "Python Skin"
  • "Lichen Song"
  • "Black Center"
  • "Under a Rising Moon"
  • "Light Echoes"
  • "First Snow"
  • "Salt cedar"
  • "Courtyard Fire"
  • "White Sands"
  • "Salt Song"
  • "The plutonium waste"
  • "Sprang"
    • 1 "Winter Stars"
    • 2 "Hole"
    • 3 "Talisman"
    • 4 "Kintsugi"
    • 5 "Yellow Lightning"
    • 6 "Red-Ruffed Lemur"
    • 7 "This Is the Writing, the Speaking of the Dream"
    • 8 "Net Light"
    • 9 "Sprang"
  • "A man who built"
  • "Transfigurations --
  • "Dawn Redwood"
  • "Xeriscape"
  • "The Far Norway Maples"
  • "Sight Lines"
  • "The Glass Constellation"

Reception

Publishers Weekly called it "finely crafted and philosophical".[4]

In her review for The New York Times, Tess Taylor wrote, "This is a poetry of assemblage, where violence and beauty combine and hang on Sze's particular gift for the leaping non sequitur."[5]

Florian Gargaillo of the Colorado Review praised Sze's philosophy represented through strikethroughs, writing, "It is this degree of self-questioning, this wariness of authority in himself and others, that makes Sze such a valuable poet for this moment."[6]

References

  1. ^ "Sight Lines by Arthur Sze". Copper Canyon Press. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  2. ^ "National Book Awards 2019". www.nationalbook.org.
  3. ^ "Sight Lines". www.nationalbook.org.
  4. ^ "Poetry Book Review: Sight Lines by Arthur Sze". Publishers Weekly. April 15, 2019. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  5. ^ Taylor, Tess (April 26, 2019). "Four New Poetry Collections Confront Despair With Wonder". The New York Times. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  6. ^ Gargaillo, Florian. "Sight Lines". Colorado Review. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
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