The Improbable Swervings of Atoms

The Improbable Swervings of Atoms

by Christopher Bursk
ISBN-10:
0822958899
ISBN-13:
9780822958895
Pub. Date:
08/20/2005
Publisher:
University of Pittsburgh Press
ISBN-10:
0822958899
ISBN-13:
9780822958895
Pub. Date:
08/20/2005
Publisher:
University of Pittsburgh Press
The Improbable Swervings of Atoms

The Improbable Swervings of Atoms

by Christopher Bursk

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Overview

Winner of the 2004 Donald Hall Prize in Poetry

The Improbable Swervings of Atoms follows the comedic, often painful, physical and emotional travails of a young boy growing up in 1950s America.  He watches the McCarthy hearings, conquers the Congo, assassinates the president, has his head stuffed into a toilet, drops his uniform on the fifty-yard line, and tries to make sense of Lucretius’s De Rerum Natura.

The poems engage history in a very intimate way, revealing how a boy, as he matures, attempts to understand the world around him, his own physical development, the people in his life, and what it means to live in a country and time where it is impossible to disengage oneself from world events—where, in fact, the quest for identity is an act that requires one to rewrite history in personal terms.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822958895
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Publication date: 08/20/2005
Series: Pitt Poetry Series
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 104
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Christopher Bursk is the author of seven previous books of poetry, including Cell Count and Ovid at Fifteen.  He is the recipient of NEA, Guggenheim, and PEW Fellowships.  Bursk is professor of English at Bucks County Community College in Pennsylvania.

What People are Saying About This

Alicia Suskin Ostriker

I fell in love with this book from the first page, and stayed in love right through. In this saga of boy-becoming-man, the poet shakes hands with Lucretius's great work On the Nature of Things, while tracking the winding paths of family, sexuality, politics, history, television, philosophy, and so much more, in language relentlessly crisp yet achingly vulnerable.

Jonathan Holden

A major book by a poet that I can only think of as 'visionary.' As Pope showed us in his Anatomy of Criticism . . . the best satire is profoundly moral, and even though it deals with ugly subject matter, improbably beautiful. This book places Christopher Bursk at the highest level of our social commentators.

Betsy Sholl

What he says of Lucretius we could easily apply to Christopher Bursk himself: that he loves this world for its 'doors flung open where no doors seem possible.' These poems are rich, daring, ironic, impassioned, and deliciously obsessive. Reading these poems, we are all enlarged. The door flung open is the door to the human heart.

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