login
    KIRKUS REVIEWSKIRKUS DISCOVERIESKIRKUS SUPPLEMENTSKIRKUS BOOKMARKS ADS.
BOOK VIDEO AWARDSNEW YORK IS BOOK COUNTRY
 
Search  Advanced  Help
  [Enter Keywords]
   


Ads by Google

Essentials

 Kirkus Discoveries


SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT | MOST POPULAR | RSS | REPRINTS



AND LIFE REMAINS
Author: Piper, Adam

Review Date: JULY 02, 2009
Publisher:CreateSpace (106 pp.)
Price (paperback): $10.00
Publication Date: September 10, 2008
ISBN (paperback): 978-1440414466
Category: AUTHORS
Classification: POETRY

In his first volume of poetry, Piper covers a wide swath of emotional and philosophical territory, documenting his thoughts and feelings along the way.

Reading the book’s end passage, a quote from Charles Bukowski, readers immediately understand what they’re getting into: “If you’re losing your soul and you know it, then you’ve still got a soul left to lose.” Piper’s sporadic and textured imagery (“it’s the insides of your pupils that dilate next to me”) is not the only element that makes this book compelling. With this volume of rhyming poetry, it’s as though the author is operating a telescopic lens, zooming in and out from the sacred to the literal, capturing a range of human emotion and thought. As he explains in a brief introduction, “This book is a representation of what is for the reader to decide. People discern words for the meanings they want for themselves.” Piper asks the abstract “meaning of life and love and loss” questions, then closes in on the three-dimensional world to explore the more dissonant aspects of society and humanity, while criticizing things like television and war. With simple language applied to universal themes, the author is a romantic, creating verse that’s accessible to any reader. Still, the work never strays too far from the specifics of his personal experience and ideas. In “Obstacle,” he writes, “Our ancestors didn’t think about / Corporations / and / Cars / What were their dreams? / Were they as materialistic as ours?” In a piece titled “Throne,” he holds up a mirror before a self-righteous snob, yet ironically (showing the work’s complexity), the accuser’s voice comes off as equally self-righteous: “You act like / You’re better than everyone else / Chances are / You don’t even know yourself.” Who among us will have trouble relating? The readers’ sympathetic feelings will connect them with the meaning of these words and ultimately the poet.

Earnest and literal, Piper’s heart is on his sleeve.




SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT | MOST POPULAR | RSS | REPRINTS

Copyright 2005 Kirkus Reviews



Return to Kirkus Discoveries Home


 Online Exclusive
Talk Like a Man: Robert B. Parker Tribute
January 15, 2010 - I still remember the first time I heard Spenser's voice ring out in the opening chapter of The Godwulf Manuscript (1973), as he razzes the college president who's trying to hire him. What's this guy's problem? I thought. Why does he have such an attitude? The attitude, I soon learned, had deep roots...Part of it was a temperamental similarity to Spenser's creator, Robert B. Parker, who died on Jan. 18th at age 77.



© 2010 Nielsen Business Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms of Use  |  Privacy Policy