Lars Gustafsson was a Swedish poet, novelist and scholar. He completed his secondary education at the Västerås gymnasium and continued to Uppsala University; he received his Licentiate degree in 1960 and was awarded his Ph.D. in Theoretical Philosophy in 1978. He lived in Austin, Texas until 2003, and has recently returned to Sweden. From 1983 he served as a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, where he taught Philosophy and Creative Writing, until May 2006, when he retired. In 1981 Gustafsson converted to Judaism.
This is the shoe-gazing of twentieth century poetry. (Literally! One poem, “Conversation Between Doubters,” is a meditation on a man gazing at his boots.) It is languid, introspective, and with darkly beautiful strings of words….but ultimately leaves one feeling empty (at best) and bored (at worst). The only redeeming feature of this book is the extraordinary photographs by Arthur Tress, which had me scrambling to add some of his photographic collections to my list of books to read. As for Gustafsson’s poetry? I have little desire to read more.
The sky of summer rain — like an X-ray plate where lights and vague shadows appear dimly. The forest silent and not a single bird. Your own eye like a spilled drop under the clouds, with the world's reflection: lights and vague shadows. And suddenly you see who you are: perplaxed stranger between mind and clouds, merely by the thin membrane of an image are the depths of the world and the eye's darkness held apart.