Synopses & Reviews
Since his poetry began appearing in the New Yorker when he was in his early twenties, Nicholas Christopher has been praised as one of America's most important poets by such literary talents as John Ashbery, Charles Simic, James Merrill, and Anthony Hecht, among others. Crossing the Equator collects Christopher's best work from the past three decades and includes a section of new poems that are among his finest. Exploring with equal brilliance the labyrinths of history and the human heart, the jagged magic of urban life and the illuminations of travel, the luminous and transformative voice of Crossing the Equator puts on display Christopher's dazzling power and myriad depths.
Cold missiles and a rain
of embers accompany the men
who slide like shadows into the city
faces mud-smeared
stones for teeth no eyes
who slit the throats of everyone
they encounter until breaking down
my door they drag me into the darkness
that floods the corridor
and lock me in an icy chamber
-from "The Last Hours of Laódikê, Sister of Hektor"
Review
PRAISE FOR CROSSING THE EQUATOR"To read [Christophers] richly honed and sensuous work, which has so much tensile strength, is to visit other worlds and then return to our own, disturbed by time, but also refreshed and reawakened."THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK WORLD"Nicholas Christopher[s] . . . three decades of poems, lyric and narrative, can be read through with enormous pleasure and considerable wonder."LOS ANGELES TIMES BOOK REVIEW
Synopsis
Nicholas Christopher has been praised as one of Americas most important poets by such literary talents as John Ashbery, Charles Simic, James Merrill, and Anthony Hecht. Crossing the Equator collects Christophers best work from the past three decades and includes a section of new poems that are among his finest.Cold missiles and a rainof embers accompany the menwho slide like shadows into the cityfaces mud-smearedstones for teeth no eyeswho slit the throats of everyonethey encounter until breaking downmy door they drag me into the darknessthat floods the corridorand lock me in an icy chamberfrom "THE LAST HOURS OF LAÓDIKÊ, SISTER OF HEKTOR"
About the Author
NICHOLAS CHRISTOPHER is the author of seven volumes of poetry, five novels, and a cultural history of film noir. He is a regular contributor to the New Yorker, Esquire, the Nation, the New Republic, the Paris Review, and other notable magazines. A professor in the School of the Arts at Columbia University, he lives in New York City.
Table of Contents
New Poems
Lake Como
The Last Hours of Laódikê, Sister of Hektor
Trópico
14 rue Serpentine (1-14)
Robert Desnos in Havana, 1928
Ultima Thule
The Woman in the Quarter Moon Kimono
The Desert
Haiku
From On Tour with Rita (1982)
Double Solitaire
Walt Whitman at the Reburial of Poe
The Track
Heat
The Road from Pisa to Florence
On the Meridian
Rimbaud Crossing the Alps
Nocturne for Miranda
On Tour with Rita
# 1 Mexico
#7 Vermont
#11 New Year's Day
#13 Boston
From A Short History of the Island of Butterflies (1986)
The Public Gardens
Cardiac Arrest
Radium
Construction Site, Windy Night
Evening
Losing Altitude
Lineage
The House Where Lord Rochester Died
Leaving Town
The Partisan
Reflections on a Bowl of Kumquats, 1936
Winter Night
The Milky Way from Brenda's Lawn
Jeoffry the Cat
Musical Chairs
From Desperate Characters (1988)
Krazy Kat
Green Animals
Collecting Stamps in Port-au-Prince
Elegy for my Grandmother
Christmas, 1956
Map
From In the Year of the Comet (1992)
Outside Perpignan in Heavy Rain
Green Chair on a Fire Escape in Autumn
Reading the Sunday Comics, Summer 1962
Epitaph on a Dictator
Mrs. Luna
Jazz
Through the Window of the All-Night Restaurant
In the Country
Scarlet Lake
Cancer Ward
On the Peninsula
Stars
Approaching Antarctica
In the Year of the Comet
From 5° & Other Poems (1995)
Hibiscus Tea
The Quiñero Sisters, 1968
Terminus
The Skeleton of a Trout in Shallow Water
When the Hurricane Swerved Toward the Island
After a Long Illness
A Storm
Assignation After Attending a Funeral
The Palm Reader
Hanalei Valley
5°
#1 Down the long avenues the north wind
#3 In a letter to his brother Theo
#5 Displayed in the coin shop window
#6 Between the thick ice and the gray waters
#10 A man with a telescope on a marble runway
#11 "Iron occurs native in meteorites (according to
#13 In 1910 Houdini was the first man to fly
#15 An angel is signing his name in blue light
#16 On the other side of the world
#18 John Davis, explorer and navigator, died the night
#19 In October, 1888, Paul Gauguin, joined van Gogh
#22 The Hyperboreans - "people beyond the North Wind" -
#24 The polestar (Polaris) during the Dark Ages
#25 The Voyager 2 satellite, launched from Florida
#26 "Iron" in Sumerian means "metal from heaven."
#31 Of the eighteen cities called Alexandria that Alexander
#32 Refracted by frozen clouds, the moon's
From The Creation of the Night Sky (1998)
Midsummer
X Rays
Antiquities
Jupiter Place, 1955
Birds of Paradise in Ice Water
Uncle Phillip's Funeral in Las Vegas
Sleep
On a Clear Night
Suicide Watch
A Visitor
The Creation of the Night Sky
From Atomic Field: Two Poems (2000)
1962
#7 A girl dyeing her bathing suit in a tub of hot water
#14 There is always someone on crutches in this luncheonette
#20 At the bus stop a blind man sells colored pencils
#22 At P.S. 28
#24 Six doors down, a beautiful young woman
#25 In my most recurring nightmare
#27 Successive snowstorms have lined the streets
#28 With a shard of ice I scratch my name
#35 The flesh the flesh-eating plants eat
#38 On the 27th of October I am told to say my prayers
#40 When my friend casts his line by moonlight
#41 In pointy shoes that lace up the sides - twist shoes -
#44 In a house outlined by Christmas lights
1972
#1 On New Year's Eve
#3 A room illuminated by the rays of black crystals
#4 In the waiting room a woman
#7 When she comes off her shift at the VA hospital
#9 The pulse I feel behind my knees
#13 Sleeping in a cold room on the rue de Rennes
#16 We're on a mountain overlooking Spain that can only be climbed
#23 The rain crossing the tarred rooftops stops suddenly
#26 The nightclub lies in a labyrinth of tunnels
#27 As the sun gilds the Arno and shades the stern faces
#29 A church filled with fiery flowers
#34 On the southern coast of Crete
#38 Today while snow slants into Manhattan
#39 The books are piled high in the corners
#43 Trucks are salting the streets
#44 From my corner table beneath a blue light
#45 Tomorrow, the New Year, the world begins anew