What do you think?
Rate this book


600 pages, Hardcover
First published January 31, 2011
It is a gift that Brendel has turned to poetry, as his imagination is a complex yet playful hangout. At times verging on the slapstick, Brendel explains a difficult world by drawing out the humour in the absurd. “And once again / the Lord of the universe / recorded a day of good works / three religious wars launched / several tornados unleashed / a new brand of pestilence devised [… ] / countless children successfully harmed”. While the Contents page reels off title after title, each section carries a sequence of uninterrupted free verse with punctuation making a rare appearance, reinforcing the idea that events and encounters cannot conform to familiar frameworks. Among the examples of more overt humour are subtle moments which reveal a solid pessimist beneath the laughter. This becomes particularly apparent in a series of love poems, which he introduces by announcing abruptly, “The moment has arrived / to write a love poem”. His imagery here is both distinctive and gloriously unexpected, especially in his sombre revelations. “Suddenly it has become simple / to lose yourself in love / One day / you look for yourself / and find nothing […] / heart over heels / a doting astronaut”. Crossing from love to death, his imagery becomes ever more charged and poignant, describing birdsong in ‘The Gallows-bird’ as “fervent like a circular saw / whose motor suddenly cuts out / when darkness / pulls the noose”.
Its poems interspersed with paintings and photographs, including one of a stuffed baby crocodile donning a bonnet and bow, this is a brilliantly surreal and penetrating collection. Brendel’s pianist’s fingers are effortlessly poetic.