The Pear As One Example selects from seven Eric Pankey volumes, and collects an eighth, Deep River. Pankey is a poet's poet. He requires patience, and rewards it, because it is not uncommon, reading him, to wonder whether the poem under hand differs sufficiently from the one just read to risk an apprehension of the pleasure the poet's craft offers. In other words, there's a deep knowing in poem-ways to be had in reading Pankey, a pleasure in voicing, trope, word-sense moving in and out of phrase, line, sentence, stanza, poem and book.
The trajectory of work The Pear As One Example follows traces a line of broad characterization within the period style of personal lyric and pastoral cultural location we associate with the Seventies in poetry -- this is the work of the first two books, For the New Year and Heartwood. With Apocrypha (1991), however, Pankey discovers a middle-style astonishing in its phrase-making and tunesmithing within what Stevens would have called the "interior paramour". That mature style culminates three books later in Oracle Figures (2003), and leads to a fascinating stylistic break in Reliquaries (2005), which is a book-length sequence of five-line stanzas, two to a page, front/back, bedighted with titles every twenty lines. The formal break seems to me as radical as the 77 Dream Songs altering of the sonnet form.
Here is all one needs to get started on Pankey.