The Clerk's Tale: Poems (Paperback)

Author: Spencer ReeceIntroduction By: Laureate Louise Gluck
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780618422548
Publisher: Mariner Books
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Buy.com Sku: 36254981
Item#: BQQYH7
Dimensions (in Inches) 8.75H x 6L x 0.5T
Pages: 64
 
The New Yorker recently devoted the entire back page to a single poem, "The Clerk"s Tale," by Spencer Reece. This debut author"s first collection had been selected by poet laureate Louise Gluck from among 850 submissions to win the 2003 Bakeless Prize of the Bread Loaf Writers" Conference. The poet who drew such unusual attention has a surprising background: for many years he has worked for Brooks Brothers, a fact that lends particular nuance to the title of his collection.
The Clerk"s Tale pays homage not only to Chaucer but to the
clerks" brotherhood of service in the mall, where "the light is bright
and artificial, / yet not dissimilar to that founding a Gothic cathedral." The fifty poems in The Clerk"s Tale are exquisitely restrained, shot though with a longing for permanence, from the quasi-monastic life of two salesmen at Brooks Brothers to the poignant lingering light of a Miami dusk to the weight of geography on an empty Minnesota farm.
 
 
Praise
New Yorker
"[T]win currents of detached humor and sorrow...run through [Spencer Reece's] debut collection. The most effective poems here are autobiographical....Reece's poems are saved from solipsism by a keen alertness to the characters around him and to the consolations of the natural world." 05/03/2004


 
Author Bio
Louise Gluck
The poet Louise Gluck won the Pulitzer Prize for her collection THE WILD IRIS. She is the recipient of a Rockefeller Foundation grant and a Guggenheim fellowship, and has spent many years teaching at Williams College.

 
 
Read A Chapter
Portofino

Promise me you will not forget Portofino.
Promise me you will find the trompe l"oeil
on the bedroom walls at the Splendido.
The walls make a scene you cannot enter.
Perhaps then you will comprehend this longing
for permanence I often mentioned to you.
Across the harbor? A yellow church. A cliff.
Promise me you will witness the day diminish.
And when the roofs darken, when the stars drift
until they shatter on the sea"s finish,
you will know what I told you is true
when I said abandonment is beautiful.



The Clerk"s Tale

I am thirty-three and working in an expensive clothier,
selling suits to men I call "Sir."
These men are muscled, groomed and cropped—
with wives and families that grow exponentially.
Mostly I talk of rep ties and bow ties,
of full-Windsor knots and half-Windsor knots,
of tattersall, French cuff, and English spread collars,
of foulards, neats, and i
Click to read more...

  
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