Description
About the Author
Jessica Greenbaum is the author of the award-winning poetry collection Inventing Difficulty. Her poems and essays have appeared in the New Yorker, the Nation, Poetry, Southwest Review, and elsewhere. She is the poetry editor of upstreet.
Reviews
One of Library Journal's Best Books in Poetry for 2012 "[Greenbaum's] great intelligence, skill with abstraction, humor, and talent for endings raise her poems far above the mundane."--Publishers Weekly "Greenbaum's work, written in the everyday patois of urban Americans, has been characterized as edgy and idiosyncratic, localized and wry, and she's earned comparisons to Whitman and Hart Crane for her lyrical familiarity with the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn and environs... Greenbaum's storyteller is not just interesting, but interested, and invested, in the world. Be it a kibbutz outside Tel Aviv, or Texas in the twentieth century, hers is a truly cosmopolitan perspective, refreshing and unique, but now practiced and increasingly refined."--Diego Baez, Booklist "This collection, in Paul Muldoon's series of Princeton Contemporary Poets, arrives trailing clouds of glory... [Jessica Greenbaum] has a clear, precise, authentic and seductive narrative voice."--Keith Richmond, Tribune "While Greenbaum finds it 'odd that just one key / let me in my front door / and into my life every day,' her fluidly, even propulsively written second collection is itself a splendid key to everyday experience."--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal (Best Books 2012: Poetry) "Readers can be grateful that the poems collected in The Two Yvonnes are between covers at last. In it we find Greenbaum, in her clear, Brooklyn vernacular--usually in the first person--exploring the preoccupations of Inventing Difficulty: issues of story and history, of the places that we inhabit and those that inhabit us, especially the specular urban turf of the city."--Lisa Russ Spaar, Los Angeles Review of Books "Greenbaum's achievement rests in her superb control of form and tone, her quirky, self-deprecating Jewish humor, and, when required, the quiet restraint that bespeaks great feeling."--Robin Becker, Women's Review of Books "In breathtaking free verse, Jessica Greenbaum's poetry is packed with descriptive moments of humor, music, imagery and imagination. Entering her narrative-driven world feels like an exhilarating roller coaster ride or a kaleidoscope of surprises."--Greta Aart, Cerise Press "In these autobiographical poems, Greenbaum maintains a light touch and keeps the focus steadily away from psychological theorizing about who did what to whom. She stays resolutely rooted in the down-to-earth, the comic, the commonsensical, and the moral, while not evading the sad and grievous. Greenbaum's poems are domestic and communal, buttressed by a sustaining network of allegiances and loyalties among a circle of friends and family... Greenbaum's subjects may be quotidian, but a handful of poems have an originality and insight that moved me."--Zara Raab, Verse Wisconsin
Book Information
ISBN 9780691156637
Author Jessica Greenbaum
Format Paperback
Page Count 80
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publisher Princeton University Press
Weight(grams) 113g