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SOURCE: Perloff, Marjorie. Review of The Man in the Black Coat Turns, by Robert Bly. Parnassus 10, no. 1 (spring-summer 1982): 209-30.
In the following excerpted review of The Man in the Black Coat Turns, Perloff observes the autobiographical and inward-looking qualities of the collection, and comments on Bly's translation of poems by the Chilean Pablo Neruda.
According to the blurb. [of Robert Bly's The Man in the Black Coat Turns],
Robert Bly has been writing the poems in this tenth collection for nearly ten years—the time it has taken to move toward the subject of this book: the nurturing power of grief, especially male grief. A man approaches his father only later in life, Bly believes, and his concentration on fathers and sons is rare in our poetry; the father has been absent in most American poetry, even in Whitman's.
The last statement is hardly accurate: the poetry of...
This section contains 3,109 words (approx. 11 pages at 300 words per page) |