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9780618443703

The Broken String

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780618443703

  • ISBN10:

    0618443703

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2007-03-09
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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Summary

In Grace Schulman's luminous new collection, music inspires meditations on joy, faith, death, and the heart. The title refers to Itzhak Perlman's resolution to perform despite a missing string, and so the book celebrates life in its fullness and in its limitations. Here Thelonius Monk evokes Creation whenhe snaps his fingers "to shape pain into order." At a street intersection where churches and a synagogue stand together, the poet recalls that "music soared in quarrels, / moans, blues, calls-and-answers, hymns that rose up / together from stone." Hailed by Harold Bloom as "a vital and permanent poet," GraceSchulman praises the day even in moments of deepest sorrow.

Author Biography

Grace Schulman is the author many acclaimed books of poetry, including Days of Wonder: New and Selected Poems, a Library Journal Best Book of the Year. For her poetry she has received a Guggenheim fellowship, the Aiken-Taylor Award, the Delmore Schwartz Memorial Award, New York University’s Distinguished Alumni Award, and three Pushcart prizes. Schulman is a distinguished professor of English at Baruch College, CUNY. She is a former director of the Poetry Center (1978–1984) and a former poetry editor of The Nation (1971–2006).

Table of Contents

The Broken Stringp. 3
The Letter Bp. 5
The Fifth of Julyp. 7
Queryp. 8
Headstonesp. 9
Blue in Greenp. 11
The Footbridgep. 12
Kol Nidrei, September 2001p. 13
First Nightsp. 17
Orson's Shadowp. 18
Thelonious Himselfp. 20
Originsp. 21
Collectorsp. 23
Art Tatum at the Gee-Haw Stablesp. 26
Joyp. 27
The Horrorp. 31
Deathp. 33
St. Sulpicep. 35
The Crow Manp. 37
Bordersp. 40
From the New Worldp. 45
Applesp. 47
Rain Downtownp. 49
Speak, Memoryp. 51
The Rowp. 53
Late Snowp. 55
In Place of Beliefp. 56
Readersp. 65
Northern Mockingbirdp. 67
Chosenp. 69
Walk!p. 70
In the Foregroundp. 72
Lesson from the Coinp. 74
Lossp. 75
Cimicifugap. 77
Harp Songp. 79
Wavesp. 81
Notesp. 83
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

Supplemental Materials

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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Excerpts

The Broken String 1 When Itzhak Perlman raised his violin and felt the string snap, he sank and looked down at legs unfit to stand and cross the stage for a replacement. He bowed to the maestro, played radiant chords, and finished the concerto with the strings he had. Rage forced low notes as this surf crashes on rock, turns, and lifts. Later, he smiled and said it's what you do: not just play the score, but make new music with what you have, then with what you have left. 2 What you have left: Bill Evans at the keyboard, Porgy. The sound rose, but one note, unworthy, stalled in his head above the weightless chords, above the bass, the trumpet's holler: Porgy. A sudden clenched fist rose, pounded the keys, fell limp: a heroin shot had hit a nerve. I Loves You, Porgy. Sundays at the Vanguard he soloed, improvised - his test that starved nameless fear. Hands pitted against each other, like the sea's crosscurrents, played away anger. 3 My father bowed before the Knabe piano, scanned notes, touched fingers lightly, and began, by some black art, I thought, his hearing gone for years. And always, Mozart, Liszt, Beethoven. One day I gasped, for there were runs he never heard, played as a broken kite string launches a lifelike eagle that might soar on what the flier holds, what he has left. Not even winds that howl along these shores and raise the surf can ever ground that flight. Late Snow First day of spring and winter can't let go. I can't let go, through dread, of silver maybes: of black that glows, as a cowbird's sheen, of gray dawns when, mud-colored, slow, the river to the west gurgles hosannas. Now near the end of the middle of my life, all I want is more wakings like this one, to watch day break, hear the trash truck growl, glance at my love's body, shadowy under bed linen, shaping a luminous question. I'll have a pale sun strike the air conditioner, turn its ice particles into asterisks, and wake a bewitched maple that will bloom despite the park's tossed soda cans, dope fumes, dog piss, rat poison, banal conversation - green as on the first day of Creation. Northern Mockingbird Day comes up like dirt islands at low tide, revealing what I cannot lose: gulls circling, a skiff upended, caulked for a new launching, a tern flying in place before a dive, lobster traps hidden in phragmites to catch - what, Moses? Long days promise miracles. But there, on the juniper's topmost bough, a bird does its high-wire act, twisting as though for ballast, singing two-note phrases: the years, the years. Rank bird, how it persists. Showoff. Not singing. Mimicking, cleverly mocking my dream to hold this day forever. The northern mockingbird, of the same species Walt Whitman heard on this same shore, and penciled in his diary. Not the same bird, of course, but with a heritage, a long line, if not long life. Its message is harsh. I won't see it forever, nor the juniper sprung up inside the center of a rosebush grown, somehow undaunted, on dry sand, unless my song can recycle this day and pass it on like flotsam, in a sea that inlays glass, wears white stones smooth, and tosses them, shining, on this shore. Come, love, let us run into the waves past the rosebush on fire, dodging clamshells, though an echoing bird calls, years, the years, and a worn fence unrolls like thumbed pages. Copyright 2007 by Grace Schulman. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company

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