"This Time": A Retrospective of Gerald Stern's Poetry


© Bernadette Geyer

Stern, Gerald. This Time: New and Selected Poems. W.W. Norton & Company: New York, 1998.

This Time: New and Selected Poems" by Gerald Stern, is a great introduction to this poet, who received the National Book Award for Poetry for this publication. He has also been the recipient of such important prizes as The Lamont Poetry Prize and the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize.

This Time collects poems from seven of Stern's previous volumes, beginning with selections from his 1971 collection, Rejoicings, and on through 1995's Odd Mercy. Fourteen new poems close the book.

Collections such as This Time are like the "best of" albums that musicians put out. They take the favorites of a poet's past books and bind them together to give the reader a really fine overview of a poet. They also allow you to observe how a poet may change or adapt their style over many years.

I found myself drawn more to Stern's earlier work, which was a bit sparer and tighter in feel. Sometimes the brief but carefully crafted, powerful poem best says what you want to say. The selections from Rejoicing in particular were more allegorical, tending toward abstraction. I enjoyed the dreamy quality of many of these poems, and also the stark unexpected turns they took, especially "In Kovalchik's Garden", where a cardinal --

She is exploring the dead pear tree.
She moves quickly in and out of the dry branches.
Her cry is part wistful, part mordant.
She is getting rid of corpses.

Rita Dove has called Stern "our modern-day Walt Whitman, tinged with an old-world longing and a new world shambling reverence." ("Poet's Corner," Washington Post Book World, November 4, 2001). This "old-world longing" is evident in many of the poems culled from Stern's past collections. For instance, in the poem "Christmas Sticks," Stern writes:

Before I leave I'll put two sticks on the porch
so they can talk to each other about poor Poland
and wrap themselves around each other the way sticks
do when most of life is gone. They will lie
a little about Walesa, one will dance
and shake his dried-out leaves as if to threaten
the other, one will lean against the wall
as if there were boots to give him courage...

Stern has a great reverence for nature, and many of the poem sin this collection lean on the subject. In these works -- with titles like "Sycamore," "Red Bird," and "Nice Mountain" -- Stern's style is much more narrative than his earlier poems; the lines are longer, and the feel is more melancholic and meandering.

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

2.   Nov 28, 2001 7:43 PM
In response to message posted by Sunbear:

Thanks, Tom! Glad you appreciated the review and subscribed to the site.

And, a ...


-- posted by BernieGeyer


1.   Nov 25, 2001 6:54 PM
Hi Bernie (or Bernadette?),

I must confess that I am not familiar with the poet, but you certainly make me want to read more of him.

I thought your review was excellent with just the right blen ...


-- posted by Sunbear





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