ISBN-13: 9781848615335 / Angielski / Miękka / 2017 / 68 str.
-When Basil Bunting declared that -Pens are too light. / Take a chisel to write, - I imagine he had in mind the kind of exact and exacting poetry Ted Pearson has been steadily producing for decades. In The Markov Chain, Pearson presents a series of eight-line poems, each composed of four exquisitely crafted alexandrines: -These formal restrictions // are like benedictions . . . Constraints lead to freedoms // exceeding predictions.- Raising the ante, Pearson uses these formal constraints to probe the social constraints contemporary culture imposes on art and life. -When the People say we, // they don't mean you and me. / The consensus they're seeking // will set no one free.- This double take on constraints creates an animating tension throughout the book, one in which -The gist of the lyric // tells a whole other tale.- Pearson's chiseled poems enact a deep investigation into language that at once revels in and questions its own constraints. Follow at your own pace, but Pearson's ear, as always, won't lead you astray.- --Paul Naylor