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More Details: Flow Chart: A Poem Flow Chart: A Poem @Amazon Flow Chart: A Poem @aStore |
Product Description
"Reticent, shy, unfailingly modern, Ashbery is as unorthodox [as] any of the great twentieth-century creators: Breton, Stravinsky, Picasso," observed Jeremy Reed in Britain's Poetry Review. "We are privileged to be around at a time when he is writing." Flow Chart, a book-length poem that first appeared in 1991, might be Ashbery's greatest creation: a staggering and exuberant "torrent of invention [that] comes as close to an epic poem as our postmodern, nonlinear, deconstructed sensibilities will allow. . . . "
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There is a great deal of humor in this work. Ashbery is a very droll writer.
Must-read Ashbery ![]()
Let's assume you're browsing this page because you have at least some familiarity with John Ashbery's poetry. Let's assume you're familiar with the classic short poems represented well in the Selected Poems (you should be), perhaps the long poems like "the Skaters" or "A Wave" or "Self Portrait in a Convex Mirror (read them too). Once that reading is behind you, and especially if you've read the three long pieces in Three Poems, Flow Chart is a necessary next adventure.Before I read Flow Chart, I think I carried a prejudice against long poems, and given Ashbery's tendency to difficulty, the prospect of reading Flow Chart was exactly my idea of laborious reading. But once I began my fears and prejudices disappeared. Though I was already a fan of Ashbery, and had read and reread most of his work, Flow Chart was soon tops on my list of satisfying reading experiences. And exactly that term, "experience", is what distinguishes this Book above mere books, separates this Poem from American poetry. This is a book one reads to experience oneself reading, to participate, so to speak, as a reader inside what must be called a work of art.By my measure, this is Ashbery at his very finest, freest, most exuberant, and most melancholy. Don't let the length dissuade you from reading this poem. Give yourself some time, allow yourself to take it in slowly, over the course of a week or two. You might find yourself, as I did, finishing a first reading and immediately scheduling the next weekend to enjoy it again in a single sitting.
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