Reviewers of contemporary poetry sometimes pull their punches, perhaps because as poets themselves they fear the repercussions. (No peace-loving flower-arrangers they, prone as they are to revenge shootings in dark alleys.) William Logan is the exception. Throughout his six collections of essays he has analysed the poetry of Gjertrud Schnackenberg, Natasha Trethewey and Yusef Komunyakaa alongside that of W. H. Auden, Walt Whitman and Shakespeare, among others. By this means he demonstrates the importance of applying the same standards to our reading of the contemporary and the canonical.
He is right, but you need steady nerves to pass judgement on a constituency so given to rancour 鈥 which helps to explain why The Hudson Review famously pronounced Logan 鈥渢he most hated man in American poetry鈥. Perhaps such a sobriquet would be warranted were he partial or mad 鈥 but he is one of the most discerning critics I have ever read. Yes, there are some reviews in Guilty Knowledge, Guilty Pleasure that might come under the rubric of 鈥渟niffy鈥, but they are all fair-minded and I don鈥檛 think anyone whose work is discussed has much to complain about. After noting Charles Bukowski鈥檚 鈥渉angdog manner, his mournful howls, his constant bellyaching鈥, Logan admits, 鈥淚f you squint, there鈥檚 a little Catullus in Bukowski鈥; despite her 鈥渨eird affectlessness鈥, Anne Carson is praised for Nox, a 鈥渄ark meditation on death and memory鈥; Thomas Lynch, convicted of 鈥渕idwest Babbitry鈥, is exonerated for his Irish poems.
For evidence of his sharpness, look at Logan鈥檚 review of Geoffrey Hill鈥檚 Oraclau, an impenetrable volume from which he squeezes more sense than anyone else I have read. And I don鈥檛 think anyone has been more straightforward about the half-heartedness of Billy Collins鈥 recent work: 鈥淣o one ever went to Collins for good poems. You went for the whimsical premise, the pang of ubi sunt regret, the genteel absent-mindedness. Now you get a poem that looks like a bird house slapped together in the back of someone鈥檚 garage.鈥
Logan is equally demanding of everyone 鈥 and rightly so. Poetry is not an art for the complacent. And he demands most from those whom he respects, intolerant of mannerism and lack of conviction: 鈥淢any of Heaney鈥檚 new poems start with the old flair and dash, but after a few lines lose their way and sputter out鈥; 鈥淕l眉ck has forced a whole world into a snow globe鈥; C. K. Williams鈥 new poems 鈥渁re blandly indifferent to style, as if he鈥檇 traded poetry for the talking cure鈥. What he has to say about Paul Muldoon is underpinned by a deep respect for his potential: 鈥淭he poems of this Artful Dodger have become little slot machines of half-baked half-rhymes, phrases shuttling and shuffling like a great Manchester loom 鈥 all for something that looks as if Stevens鈥檚 Sea Surface Full of Clouds had been run through a blender.鈥
Logan has earned the right to this: a formidable poet himself, he knows how demanding an art it can be. Yet there is nothing inward about his stance. And he is as testing of scholars as he is of practitioners. One of the glories of Guilty Knowledge, Guilty Pleasure is a series of articles about recent editions of the various writings of Elizabeth Bishop; that of her correspondence contains 鈥減ossibly the dullest footnotes ever written鈥. This book鈥檚 corrective influence is badly needed: the tsunami of experimental poetry and prose emanating from creative writing departments across North America demonstrates how comprehensively those responsible have renounced any pretence to critical thought. Those who aspire to the study or practice of 鈥渙ur savage art鈥 could do no better than read this and Logan鈥檚 other collections; they are a masterclass in how to read.
Guilty Knowledge, Guilty Pleasure: The Dirty Art of Poetry
By William Logan
Columbia University Press, 344pp, 拢24.00
ISBN 9780231166867
Published 8 April 2014
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