Gardening Sale!
 
 

Special Offers see all

Enter to WIN!

Weekly drawing for $100 credit. Subscribe to our Specials newsletter for a chance to win.
Privacy Policy

More at Powell's


Recently Viewed clear list


Original Essays | April 29, 2013

Edward Lee: IMG How to Clarify Butter: A Writer's Tale



Chefs don't have time to write. While I was working on Smoke and Pickles, I was running a restaurant — a daily regimen of testing recipes,... Continue »
  1. $20.97 Sale Hardcover add to wish list

spacer
Ships free on qualified orders.
$19.50
New Trade Paper
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist
available for shipping or prepaid pickup only
Available for In-store Pickup
in 7 to 12 days
Qty Store Section
25 Remote Warehouse Poetry- A to Z

Personationskin

by

Personationskin Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Review:

"Parker is one of the oddest poet's you're likely to meet. With a hyperactive sense of humor and an irreverence to match, Parker creates poems that push so hard at their own boundaries, they're likely to explode at any moment. 'REJOICE EVERYTHING IS TRUE,' says Parker, and he almost means it — this debut is full of unsustainable assertions: 'LOAFING IS NOT JUST AN ARTFORM,/ IT IS ARTFORM'; 'I sit in my window, a talking monkey'; 'Night's nothing but a low hum from the wiregrid of goodbyes/ and getwells we are.' No poet has had this kind of simultaneous reverence for and disregard of the poetic tradition since Bill Knott. Many of Parker's poems take the form of little disjunctive stories ('My name is Regina I wear glasses// and sometimes only one shoe./ This is my house'), while others are frustrating and entertaining lists of mostly capitalized blips and stream of consciousness observations: 'PLAYING TO THE PEANUT GALLERY// TAKING A PISS ON A PILE OF URINAL ICE IN DUBLIN.' Some readers will slam this book shut as soon as they open it; others will keep it open in their heads forever." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Synopsis:

Hilarity in the vault A man without a face and an ever-shifting position on things: sheer terror and comedy follow where everywhere, divides. — Fanny Howe To read Karl Parker's poems is to revel in the tremendous reach of a mind that, more than any other I've read (more than John Clare, more than Khlebnikov or Kharms or Huerta) can render me awed at the realization that we, each of us, has a person inside our skins with us. Parker enacts this phenomelogical remembering with such a wit and lyricism, and such a grief, that I believe him likely one of the smartest, saddest, funniest writers alive. He is without doubt one of my favorite writers. I have been following his work for years. And so will people for years to come. — Gabriel Gudding

Product Details

ISBN:
9780578018720
Author:
Parker, Karl
Publisher:
No Tell Books
Subject:
General
Subject:
Poetry-A to Z
Publication Date:
20091031
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Language:
English
Pages:
138
Dimensions:
7.44x9.68x.29 in. .57 lbs.

Related Subjects

Children's » Activities » General
Fiction and Poetry » Poetry » A to Z
Religion » Comparative Religion » General

Personationskin New Trade Paper
0 stars - 0 reviews
$19.50 In Stock
Product details 138 pages No Tell Books - English 9780578018720 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "Parker is one of the oddest poet's you're likely to meet. With a hyperactive sense of humor and an irreverence to match, Parker creates poems that push so hard at their own boundaries, they're likely to explode at any moment. 'REJOICE EVERYTHING IS TRUE,' says Parker, and he almost means it — this debut is full of unsustainable assertions: 'LOAFING IS NOT JUST AN ARTFORM,/ IT IS ARTFORM'; 'I sit in my window, a talking monkey'; 'Night's nothing but a low hum from the wiregrid of goodbyes/ and getwells we are.' No poet has had this kind of simultaneous reverence for and disregard of the poetic tradition since Bill Knott. Many of Parker's poems take the form of little disjunctive stories ('My name is Regina I wear glasses// and sometimes only one shoe./ This is my house'), while others are frustrating and entertaining lists of mostly capitalized blips and stream of consciousness observations: 'PLAYING TO THE PEANUT GALLERY// TAKING A PISS ON A PILE OF URINAL ICE IN DUBLIN.' Some readers will slam this book shut as soon as they open it; others will keep it open in their heads forever." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Synopsis" by , Hilarity in the vault A man without a face and an ever-shifting position on things: sheer terror and comedy follow where everywhere, divides. — Fanny Howe To read Karl Parker's poems is to revel in the tremendous reach of a mind that, more than any other I've read (more than John Clare, more than Khlebnikov or Kharms or Huerta) can render me awed at the realization that we, each of us, has a person inside our skins with us. Parker enacts this phenomelogical remembering with such a wit and lyricism, and such a grief, that I believe him likely one of the smartest, saddest, funniest writers alive. He is without doubt one of my favorite writers. I have been following his work for years. And so will people for years to come. — Gabriel Gudding
spacer
spacer
  • back to top
Follow us on...




Powell's City of Books is an independent bookstore in Portland, Oregon, that fills a whole city block with more than a million new, used, and out of print books. Shop those shelves — plus literally millions more books, DVDs, and eBooks — here at Powells.com.