Description
| Author/Contributor(s): | Carroll, Jim |
| Publisher: | Penguin Books |
| Date: | 10/1/1998 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
In 1973, at the age of twenty-three,
Jim Carroll burst upon the poetry scene with his first collection,
Living at the Movies, a book of vivid and inventive verse that won him comparisons to everyone from
Arthur Rimbaud to
Frank O’Hara.
Carroll’s first new book of poetry in more than a decade,
Void of Course presents work composed over the last two years. His major themes–love, friendship, desire, time and memory, and, above all, the ever-present city–emerge in an atmosphere where dream and reality mingle on equal terms. These seventy-seven poems range from graphic, sensuous shorter pieces to edgy stream-of-consciousness prose poems to longer, more contemplative works such as “While She’s Gone,” an eerie tour de force of longing over a departed lover.
Void of Course establishes that Carroll’s power and purity of vision are stronger than ever.





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