About this item
Highlights
- The Odeon, a new volume of essays by the celebrated poet and critic Daniel Tobin, takes its title from the classical Greek and Roman buildings designed for the presentation of musical and poetic compositions.
- About the Author: Daniel Tobin is a poet, editor, translator, and essayist whose work has been named among the best books of the year by the New York Times.
- 272 Pages
- Literary Criticism, Poetry
Description
Book Synopsis
The Odeon, a new volume of essays by the celebrated poet and critic Daniel Tobin, takes its title from the classical Greek and Roman buildings designed for the presentation of musical and poetic compositions. Organized around the question of "sensibility"--with its various social, philosophical, and aesthetic connotations--the collection presents a sequence of related essays exploring both resonances and dissonances in the traditions of modern and contemporary poetry. Although Tobin surveys a broad spectrum of works--ranging from John Donne and Emily Dickinson to writers from the twenty-first century such as Mark Doty, Louise Glück, and Carl Phillips--his emphasis remains on details of poetic practice, technique, metaphysical outlook, and artistic aspiration.
What most informs these essays is Tobin's own practice as a poet, his own sensibility, which is at once eclectic and yet very much calibrated to matters of what one theologian termed "ultimate concern." The Odeon offers an incisive foray into the state of the art of poetry in our time.Review Quotes
"The Odeon is a symphonic achievement that sets contemporary American and English poetry within and against the historical backdrop of Western poetry. Tobin is himself one of America's most accomplished poets, whose poems bring a deep sense of intellectual and cultural history to bear on even the most intimate and personal experience. It's no surprise that his discussions of poetry are equally wide-ranging, erudite, and detailed--and a total delight to read."--Alan Shapiro, author of By and By
"If there is a book that beautifully configures the weight of the present into contexts of aesthetics, of intersections or collisions with science, religion, and ideas of poetry, it is this collection of essays by Daniel Tobin, a poet whose erudite seriousness travels the seen and the unseen realities of our lives. This is a set of diverse and inclusive meditations by one of our most noted poets."--Afaa M. Weaver, author of A Fire in the Hills
About the Author
Daniel Tobin is a poet, editor, translator, and essayist whose work has been named among the best books of the year by the New York Times. His honors include the Discovery/The Nation Award, the Robert Penn Warren Award, the Katharine Bakeless Nason Prize, and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation.