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No Messages - (Ernest Sandeen Prize for Poetry) by Robert Hahn (Paperback)
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Highlights
- No Messages, the 2001 winner of the Ernest Sandeen Prize, is Robert Hahn's second major collection of poetry.
- About the Author: Robert Hahn is President of Johnson State College in Johnson, Vermont.
- 150 Pages
- Poetry, American
- Series Name: Ernest Sandeen Prize for Poetry
Description
Book Synopsis
No Messages, the 2001 winner of the Ernest Sandeen Prize, is Robert Hahn's second major collection of poetry. In commenting on Hahn's collection All Clear, Richard Howard called attention to Hahn's ability "to ground his perceptions, his discoveries in a specific circumstance . . . to reach the risen condition, the state beyond, which is the purpose of all his poems."
Howard's analysis anticipates the poems of No Messages, which focus on particular places and characters while they progress, through motions of the mind and maneuvers of language, toward a "state beyond," which involves a reformulating or a reseeing--reconfigurations of an apprehended world through language and form.
In its exploration of the seams and the seamlessness of language and reality, No Messages is an apt introduction to the new millennium. The "no messages" of the title reflects a basic tension in contemporary poetry, between its claim to exist in the realms of language and structure, and its sense of responsibility to render the world in its actuality, in a clarified or confronted state. A striking balance of this tension is found in the collection's central section, a suite of poems responding to the influence of James Merrill.
While No Messages is devoted to revisionings of the world in language, it remains grounded in circumstance and place and in the actions and convictions of historical figures. The book opens with John Knox on the beach at St. Andrews in Scotland and closes with John Brown on the bank of the Pottowatamie River in Kansas. Between these two shores, No Messages describes a series of luminous arcs connecting this world and the world beyond.
Review Quotes
"In Hahn's hands, modern transience nearly becomes a state of grace: he moves seamlessly between the Paradise Valley Mall and Chartres Cathedral, Indiana and Avignon, Ohio and Corinth, achieving an utterly believable fusion of place and moment. [T]his prize-winning collection succeeds masterfully, and should stand as sufficient evidence ... of art's efficacy." --PN Review
About the Author
Robert Hahn is President of Johnson State College in Johnson, Vermont. His previously published volumes of poetry are All Clear (1996), One More Time, Crimes, and Routine Risks.