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Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys: Poems

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Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, now in paperback

D. A. Powell’s fifth book of poetry, Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys, explores the darker side of divisions and developments, the interstitial spaces of boonies, backstage, bathhouse, and bar. With witty banter, emotional resolve, and powerful lyricism, this collection demonstrates Powell’s exhilarating range.

120 pages, Paperback

First published February 14, 2012

21 people are currently reading
962 people want to read

About the author

D.A. Powell

26 books321 followers
D. A. Powell is the author of Tea, Lunch, Cocktails, Chronic and Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys, which received the National Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry in 2013.

Repast, Powell's latest, collects his three early books in a handsome volume introduced by novelist David Leavitt.

A recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, Powell lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Follow D. A. Powell on Twitter: Powell_DA

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5 stars
153 (38%)
4 stars
123 (31%)
3 stars
91 (22%)
2 stars
27 (6%)
1 star
2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 54 reviews
Profile Image for James Murphy.
982 reviews26 followers
October 26, 2012
Wow. Reading a review I was attracted to the book. I didn't understand that D. A. Powell is homosexual. I didn't make the connection from the subtitle or from the Boy Scout motif of the cover art. Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys is homosexually tuned. More, much of it is homosexual love poetry. Most of it is lovely. All of it is eloquent as well as powerful. This may be the best new poetry I've read this year. Powell's volatile images ring with such emphatic precision that they rise out of a murkily mysterious lifestyle to show us the truth about desire. He writes it so we're all involved in the fresh exhilaration of the randy, the need for an emotional fix, the headlong rush and clutch at deeper passion. Good poetry makes it universal.
Profile Image for Benjamin.
Author 7 books12 followers
November 12, 2012
I'm currently a host of a radio show called The Weekly Reader, which interviews authors of new work every week. I was lucky enough to get D. A. Powell on the phone to discuss this book. I had never read his work before, but I got a big kick out of the humor in Useless Landscapes, as well as the more subtle poems--you know, the ones about landscape. Anyway, he's a really cool and incredibly smart guy. I won't be hosting this radio show much longer, but I'll be looking for his next collection whenever it comes out. I've pasted a link to the interview below in case anybody's interested.

http://kmsuweeklyreader.libsyn.com/d-...
Profile Image for Michael Buckner.
6 reviews2 followers
February 26, 2012
The book delivers poetry that is open and honest, which I like. There are times throughout each poem where Powell tries to let the imagery lead the poem, but it often fell flat with me. The poems that came from within and the personal experiences works much better as they don't seem to be laden with images that try to be crisp and beautiful. These more personals poems had a weight to them and a strong sense of character that I felt like the author was standing on a stage pouring out his emotions for us to truly understand his art.

It is by no means a bad book of poetry, but some of the poems didn't seem to work while others far surpassed the ones that surrounded it.
Profile Image for Christine.
44 reviews16 followers
March 20, 2012
Though Powell's departure from his own form requires a bit of adjustment on the part of the Powell devotee, I genuinely loved the majority of poems in this book. I kept rereading them and I wanted to share them with others. I grew up in the Sacramento Valley region of Northern California, and Powell manages to capture that landscape—both its fertile beauty and its seedy underbelly—for me.
Profile Image for Inverted.
185 reviews21 followers
January 30, 2013
I'll probably regret or change this rating later, but fuck. As a collection, Useless Landscape is uneven. Some poems are so so, but there are a good number of poems here (maybe ten, give or take a couple) that make me wish I have the range and the audacity to write something similar.
Profile Image for Meredith.
303 reviews8 followers
March 7, 2013
The more personal poems about love and sex engaged me more than the ones about landscapes and flowers and shizz. His meditations on aging were darned fine. Why do we need to fall apart physically when we get it together mentally? It is unfair.
Profile Image for Quiver.
1,135 reviews1,353 followers
August 14, 2019

Hell is the most miraculous invention of love,
no matter how the love turns out.
Hell is the place from whence the music of longing—
which accounts for most of what we call music—
gets written.
(From 'Panic in the Year Zero')


The first collection Useless Landscape features inventive poems that shimmer between agriculture and homoeroticism. I welcomed the fine metaphors, but the ambiguity meant I couldn't decide on which aspect to focus and would find myself flicking back and forth, which created a mishmash effect rather than a coherent, complex whole. A Guide for Boys is more explicit in its eroticism and somehow felt cruder, less innovative for it (though with some nuanced, evocative exceptions on ageing and love).

Crush by Richard Siken remains my favourite on fire in the poetic homoerotic category.
Profile Image for Cassandra.
386 reviews14 followers
December 26, 2019
I was attracted to this book solely for the fact of the lovely cover and that it was poetry.
The feeling I got from this was very melancholy.

“No one gets back to his god unscathed.”
Profile Image for Jenny (Reading Envy).
3,876 reviews3,730 followers
March 25, 2013
I first heard about D.A. Powell when he was announced as the judge for the New Southern Voices Poetry Prize sponsored by the Hub City Writers Project. I have to admit to being unfamiliar with him previously, although he has been an award winner and nominee a few times over.

I am giving this three stars, which is my typical rating for solid enough writing that also happens to not really be my thing. My eyes glaze over when poets want to be overly descriptive. I found his shorter poems to be far more powerful and thought-provoking. I didn't mind those that talked about his relationships, and it was nice that he didn't filter it. A lot of his poems are about aging, a worn out body, sagging and libidoless. Again, just not something I personally resonate with.

My favorites:

Love Hangover, which includes the line "I'd blow the devil if he offered. Apparently he did."

Outside Thermalito about how bitterness is sometimes the only way, both going and coming. It is also a tiny tiny poem, and I love thoughts well-expressed in such brevity.

Pupil , where he muses about teaching young poets. I really loved this one. As someone who works with students who are creative (although not on creative ventures exactly), I understood those feelings. A different sort of flipped classroom, shall we say.
Profile Image for JS Found.
136 reviews9 followers
November 11, 2013
Desire, sex, change as filtered through Nature. These are lyrics where man's lusts have their correlative in natural wonders and processes. These are also funny, playful poems about weakness, place (in the towns rural of California) and people. They're sexually explicit puns. They're stories about illness that recall Aids. Powell has an incredible vocabulary and he uses a lot of nature jargon--bring a good dictionary with you. Many poems deal with childhood and the change both in the person and the place he's from as the years go by and some things, things you were fond of, things that meant the whole world, disappear. The sweet ache of memory. Some of the poems are inscrutable but one way to read poetry is not for the meaning but for the beauty of the language. In this I recommend reading these poems out loud.
Profile Image for Andrew.
720 reviews5 followers
February 6, 2013
There is a graceful languor to many of these poems which makes them a tremendous pleasure to read. Powell's characteristic wordplay and wit are in full flower, and he solidifies a growing pastoral strain from Chronic, his last volume, which has added a gorgeous new dimension to his already quite rounded repertoire.
Profile Image for Darrell.
20 reviews
November 27, 2013
This collection has some solid humorous moments. And for me the humor is based upon the audacity of the speaker to be so deliberate with allusions and references. Those points made me laugh. Also there were really short and impactful poems as well. I feel the collection petered out near the end, but there are some really strong poems in this collection. Would recommend.
Profile Image for Luis Correa.
214 reviews12 followers
March 1, 2012
Not my favorite of his. Depends a little too much on the double entendre, which had me giggling when I saw him read, but maybe I'm just in a bit of a funk (and no, not in Funkytown). Some transcendently brilliant poems in here though, especially the two title poems!
Profile Image for Kathleen.
Author 10 books6 followers
July 10, 2012
What a gorgeous collection of language and song. These poems explore all sorts of landscapes, pulling the reader into place with the density of the music and the detailed descriptions. "Tender Mercies" is one of the very best poems I've read this year.
Profile Image for Beverly.
119 reviews15 followers
June 8, 2013
This one reminded me how awesome poetry is as a tool for going where other kinds of writing can't and coming out unhurt.
Profile Image for elise amaryllis.
152 reviews
October 24, 2019
3.5/5
dunno how i feel about this collection. i found the poems that i didn't enjoy suuper dull but i did like a good amount of them. it was also just that the poems i liked & disliked would be clustered together, so i'd be reading pages of stuff i loved, enthused, contemplating a 5 star rating, & then everything would be painfully dull again. makes it kindaa hard to rate because my emotions about the collection changed pretty rapidly depending on the section. gonna go with a 3.5/5 and round it up to a 4. it did feel like reading a mix of 2-star and 5-star poetry so i think that's pretty accurate.

some of my favorites:
- Cherry Blossoms in Spring
- Tender Mercies
- Love Hangover
- Abandonment Under The Walnut Tree (!!!)
- Goodbye, My Fancy
- Transit of Mercury (!!!)
- Summer Of My Bone Density Test (!!!)
- The Great Unrest (!!!)
- Orchard in January

quotes:

"9 o'clock. Time to smoke a joint
that's lets me take my pills.

10 o'clock. Time to take my pill
to take my pills.

11 o'clock. I take my pills

12 o'clock. I take my little pills.

I call them dolls this time.
I take my dolls.

I always loved this film.
But then: I wasn't in it.

When did I stop feeling sure, feeling
safe, and start wondering why


Suspense, you're killing me.
[close-up on dolls]"
—Valley of The Dolls

"I can only give you back what you imagine.
I am a soulless man. When I take you
into my mouth, it is not my mouth. It is
an unlit pit, an aperture opened just enough
in the pinhole camera to capture the shade.

I have caused you to rise up to me, and I
have watched as you rose and waned.
Our times together have been innumerable. Still,
like a Capistrano swallow, you come back.
You understand: I understand you. Understand
each jiggle and tug. Your pudgy, mercurial wad.

I am simply a hand inexhaustible as yours
could never be. You're nevertheless prepared to shoot.
If I could I'd finish you. Be more than just your rag."
—The Fluffer Talks of Eternity
Profile Image for Matthew Richards.
111 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2026
"...I was a billard ball
for those who cared to knock me in the pockets
on the table in The Wreck Room afterhours.
It wasn't only Amtrak pulling trains each night.
Each man who lost his stake in me had lost
his gamecock, his bathhouse boychick,
the pullet at the pumphouse, the tipsy one, free-living

The cues were often skewed. When simple coxcombs
preened, I wasn't squeamish on their knees
as without means, I groomed their inch-long wattles."
-from "Chicken"

Deliciously gay, horny, and dripping with innuendo on every line. Who knew nature and all its related imagery had so much double-entendre? Every year I read at least one poetry collection that feels specially written for me. This was that book.

Surprising mix of both the raunchy and the coy, both the classy and juvenile, with suggestive Latinate words that sent me to the dictionary in hear. Other reviewers were absolutely right about "Tarnished Angel" being the highlight of the collection, and I would add "Missionary Man" as an emotional standout. Powell's poems on aging also packed in some heartfelt heft. "Backdrop with Splashes of Cum on It" was exactly as soaked with audacity as you'd expect, and ended with some of the gayest biblical wordplay I've read.

I would've given this 5 stars if it weren't for how much I goddamn hate his "Bojangles" poem. My fiancé and I read it a few times, and I can only interpret it as a cautionary guide on how *not* to sexualize Black guys. (And Shirley Temple, too, depending on how you read the last line.)
Profile Image for Joe Sacksteder.
Author 3 books36 followers
July 19, 2017
Fruit and frost are predominant themes—or, more generally, verdure versus aging—and Powell's poems become preservation techniques by which something more may be made of loss than regret. "Would that there were some other way," he muses, the simultaneous sweetening and decline catalyzed by experience. "Stonefruit is almost as good as fresh, / when the spiteful frost arrives."

Fresh word play and always surprising collocation reveals a volatile combinatorial engine at work. Squiggling unknown or volatile words, I found myself suddenly having never encountered the word pity in "the night he drove her in his pity truck," such is the defamiliarizing capacity of Powell's lines.

Parks haunt peripheries, even in the heart of the city, patches of pastoral where encounters edit the history of desire. Likewise these poems bloom in our blurbed canon, offering some respite from safety, some comfort come oblivion.
Profile Image for atito.
732 reviews13 followers
October 16, 2024
wow i may be making a mistake jumping from tea to this book but i had these two from the library so here we are. this is a completely different beast of similar proportions. powell makes of erotics a substance ephemeral & tangential & heartbreakingly capacious, as he is wont to do, and in this volume it is wide enough to count for a landscape or the way you would trace one. so many of the poems look retroactively to sex--past the cumshot, which makes the sex sweet & strange & already gone, gone enough to miss. and that feeling itself gets mapped on to aging, which is itself a map of california, which is really a river into a flower, which was the trumpet vine near which powell was fucking, i think, once
Profile Image for Matt.
59 reviews1 follower
October 27, 2025
I feel like I have to give this a 3 star rating because objectively it is very well written, if a bit lofty and challenging at times. Personally, I did not resonate with most of the narratives being told here, as it focused mostly on a very specific set of experiences that I don't have personal attachments to. That being said, it is an extremely interesting set of reading. I would in no terms say this is a bad reading experience but I know theres gonna be a spectrum of who this works for and who it doesnt.
Profile Image for G.
936 reviews62 followers
November 8, 2019
D.A. Powell's language is warmly erudite, sometimes erotic, and always appealingly personal.
Profile Image for Jay Rose.
118 reviews7 followers
October 10, 2022
This was an incredibly erotic piece of literature.
Profile Image for TA Inskeep.
226 reviews6 followers
February 14, 2024
Many of these poems irritated me, seemingly impressive at how they clever they are. A few got under my skin in a good way, but overall, this just... wasn't my thing. (2.5 stars.)
Profile Image for Helin.
9 reviews
March 8, 2024
Probably need to come back to some of them, rushed it a bit too much
44 reviews
April 15, 2024
Some of the more challenging poems I’ve encountered, but it has encouraged me to continue diving into this form.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 54 reviews

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