January 2008, by Ben Mazer (Dark Sky Books)
January 2008 collects 135 poems, written shortly after the death of the poet Landis Everson.
ISBN: 9780615343051
“Like fragments of old photographs happened on in a drawer, Ben Mazer’s poems tap enigmatic bits of the past that suddenly come to life again. To read him is to follow him along a dreamlike corridor where everything is beautiful and nothing is as it seems.” — John Ashbery, author of Planisphere
“A surge of poems in the aftermath of a friend’s sudden death, recalling Emily Dickinson’s ‘After great sadness a formal feeling comes.’ And indeed the formality here is in the nature of a deliverance. Not so easy: the echoes rage and multiply, rhymes (better/ water/ patter) knock about and sometimes screech, big-time history pales or looks cheap compared to simpler intimacies — and sometimes a moon-like ‘she’ appears to cast much-needed receptivity every which way. The poems are all necessity, ‘a frozen crystal spectrum magnified,’ a procession.” — Bill Berkson, author of Portrait and Dream
“Ben Mazer’s January 2008 reads like pages ripped from an ingenious madman’s most personal journal, like love letters never sent — in other words like unbridled passion penned in the flame of a moment and not meant for any eyes but the writer’s own. Here intense confessional lines seduce us into a universe of surreal grotesque, where satin monkeys keep company alongside Frankenstein and movie stars from the golden age of cinema appear nonchalantly alongside Dante’s Beatrice in Mazer’s testament to love, loss, and most importantly, to poetry.” — Katy Henriksen, publisher of Cannibal Books
“Highly explosive. Radioactive material. The richest work of American poetry so far this century.” – Stephen Sturgeon, editor of Fulcrum

Ben Mazer was born in New York City in 1964. His poems have been widely published in international periodicals, including Fulcrum, Verse, Harvard Review, Jacket, Agenda, Stand, Boston Review, Salt, and The Wolf. His poetry collections include Poems (The Pen & Anvil Press, 2010), and two chapbooks, The Foundations of Poetry Mathematics (Cannibal Books, 2008) and Johanna Poems (Cy Gist Press, 2007). He is the editor of Selected Poems of Frederick Goddard Tuckerman (Harvard University Press, 2010), Landis Everson’s Everything Preserved: Poems 1955-2005 (Graywolf Press, 2006, winner of the first Emily Dickinson Award from the Poetry Foundation), and a forthcoming edition of the poems and critical prose of John Crowe Ransom. He lives in Boston, where he is a contributing editor to Fulcrum: An Annual of Poetry and Aesthetics.
January 2008 is now available. Order your copy today.
ISBN: 978-0-615-34305-1
From the collection:
– Frankenstein the aviator flew
– When all red satin monkeys sleep on trains
– When the wind has had enough it bangs
From the Reviews of January 2008:
– “Mazer can clearly do it, can write accessible poems of heft and beauty—to say nothing of the fact that he can actually come out with two books simultaneously, and that he’s got the guts to come out with a book of, essentially, grief and love (it’d be interesting to read January 2008 up next to Anne Carson’s recent and stunning NOX)—for this we should all, any of us interested in language and poetry, be glad.” — Weston Cutter, The Rumpus
– “It responds from within a complete life, Joycean in its fullness.” — Dan Pritchard, The Wooden Spoon
– “Ben Mazer’s poems find aesthetic unity by arranging their emotional resonances in the themes and variations of the musical phrase, giving both voice and silence to the personal experiences that evade language… Mazer’s layering of details, coupled with a tautness of form that is carefully governed by an exceptional musical ear places him among the most dynamic and original poets of his generation.” — Christopher Bock, Jacket Magazine




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