Groom Falconer

Subtitle
Poems

Author Norman Dubie

"Catastrophe, disease, death and allied states of uncomfortable consciousness — commonly hallucinatory and religious, heightened and extreme — are the subjects of Dubie's characteristically dark and disquieting 14th collection of poems. Populated with 'dead fathers,' 'swollen' infants, 'purple rows of charged gladiolas,' 'a great red cave of muscle' and 'a naked Navajo giantess eating a peach,' the poems shift rapidly from the horrifying experiences of historical figures such as Georg Trakl, Edgar Allen Poe and Ethel Rosenberg to the fevered sleep of Dubie's wife and his own brushes with fear and disaster. His poetry, vivid, cynical and estranging, can result in hypnotic imagery and unforgettably bizarre stories imbued with individual vision, and Dubie's flat, unobtrusive style works well as a foil in the best poems, giving grotesque dreams and daytime obsessions due gravity." – Publishers Weekly

Published in hardcover in 1989.

Praise for this book

In the apocalyptic landscape of Dubie's 14th book of poems, obsessive memories (including those of his father, a New England minister) fuse with elegies to artistic martyrs (Margaret Fuller, Trakl, Van Gogh). Dubie's speakers distance themselves from accidents, civil war, storms, and bizarre death with a style so exact that the Hieronymus Bosch-like nightmares being offered are made to resemble the commonplace. ... These poems intrigue and horrify, but despite the pain, Dubie listens 'to the pure/ God rendering voice of a storm.'

Frank Allen Library Journal
Cover of Groom Falconer by Norman Dubie
Date published
Publisher
W. W. Norton
ISBN
978-0393305708

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