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Hardcover
First published January 1, 1970
Regarding Wave was my introduction to Gary Snyder, and it left me in that interesting middle space: I could tell there was something here—but I wasn’t fully inside it yet.
Opening hook / context:
Coming in cold, this felt like encountering a system already in motion. The tone is calm, the lines are clean, and there’s a sense of disciplined attention running through everything. But at first pass, it read more like form than force.
What it’s trying to do:
This isn’t poetry aiming for dramatic effect or emotional sweep. It’s doing something quieter: cultivating awareness. Attention to nature, to relationship, to the rhythms of lived experience. Not trying to overwhelm you—more like inviting you to notice.
There’s a strong current of integration here—human life, landscape, and feeling held in a kind of steady balance. Nothing inflated, nothing forced.
Where it works:
The restraint is real, and when it lands, it lands clean. There are moments where a few simple lines carry more weight than a page of more “impressive” poetry. You can feel that this is coming from practice, not performance.
It also establishes Snyder’s voice clearly: grounded, attentive, uninterested in spectacle. That alone made me curious enough to keep going.
Where it struggles (for me, at the time):
As an entry point, it felt a bit too refined—like arriving after the system has already stabilized. I could see the clarity, but I didn’t yet feel the source of it. The poems often seemed to gesture toward something deeper without fully pulling me into it.
Instead of “this reveals something,” I kept landing on “there’s something here I’m not quite accessing yet.”
Final orientation:
This turned out to be a doorway, not a destination.
Reading it first, then moving to Myths & Texts and later Axe Handles, made the arc visible. Regarding Wave is the refinement phase—the clarity that comes after contact and integration—but without that context, it can feel a little distant.
Three stars. Respectful, disciplined, and quietly strong—but for me, it functioned more as an introduction to a system than a full experience of it.