Synopses & Reviews
Jeff Dolvens poems take the guise of fables, parables, allegories, jokes, riddles, and other familiar forms. So, there is an initial comfort: I remember this, the reader thinks, from the stories of childhood . . . . But wait, something is off. In each poem, an uncanny conceit surprises the form, a highway paved with highwaymen, a school for shame, a family of chairs. Dolven makes these strange wagers with the grace and edgy precision of a metaphysical poet, and there are moments when we might imagine ourselves to be somewhere in the company of Donne or Spenser. Then we encounter The Invention: A Libretto for Speculative Music,” which is, wellsurreal, and features a decisively modern, entirely notional score, sung by an inventor and his invention, which (who?) turns out to be a 40s-type piano-perched chanteuse who (which?) somehow knows all the words to the song you never knew you had in you. The daring of this collection is not in replaying the fractured polyphony of our moment.
Speculative Music gives us accessible lyrics that still manage to listen in on our echoing interiors. These are poems that promise Frosts momentary stay against confusion” and, at the same time, provoke a deep, head-shaking wonder.
Review
Here is a surprising new poet.... In a time when every other poet seems to have an extraliterary agenda, Dolven rather old-fashionedly makes poetry out of words and their implications, as if he were some Elizabethan sonneteer as or more intent on delight than passion, on thought than emotion. Well, delightful he issmart, too.” Booklist, starred review
"If these poems are hands, and these hands move within ustheir readers, their puppetsthey are sleight of hands, conjuring a deep cavern beyond their spare proscenia. As though through a distorting glass, Speculative Musics slant untruths only focus more acutely the poems profound yearnings. Goethe would recognize a cousin!" Susan Wheeler
In Speculative Music, Jeff Dolven takes up the great and rare project of "inventio": these poems are imaginative discoveries, beautiful contraptions. A music-hall sprightliness barely cloaks "the querying steel" flashing throughout. The command and dash here at times might remind you of Auden, but Dolven is his own (split) man. Here is the world, askew. Here is a poet who can indeed string a string . . . through everything.”” Maureen McLane
"It's the kind of book where you want to call up a friend and say, listen to this, listen to his other one, whatever is he going to do next? Utterly original, within the poem leaping like a mountain goat from one change of meaning to another of some word or homonym the poem obsesses on. He can tell you that the humming bird hums because it doesn't know the words, and that on the phone it's neither hear nor there, and hello, hello, am I still here? All by means of an extremely adept prosody, always always alive. Sometimes (rather cheerfully ) despairing, sometime coolly objective, always sympathetic to who he is and who we are, and amused by all of us. It's a delight. More than a delight. But it's a delight." David Ferry
Synopsis
Parables, allegories, jokes, riddles, and a full librettoJeff Dolvens debut collection gives us accessible lyrics and a multitude of pleasures.
Synopsis
"My Puppets"
So this must be my poem-puppet, yes?
Don't be naïve. The poem is my hand.
Can't you feel it here inside you, friend?
It enters where it can, and reaches up,
way up behind your eyes. So realistic,
how your mouth moves like that as you read.
Jeff Dolven's poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The Times Literary Supplement, The Yale Review, and elsewhere. He studied at Yale University and Oxford, teaches Renaissance poetry at Princeton University, and is an editor at large for Cabinet magazine.
About the Author
Jeff Dolven grew up in Massachusetts and studied at Yale and Oxford. His poems have appeared in
The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The Times Literary Supplement, The Yale Review, and elsewhere.
Speculative Music is his first collection. He teaches poetry and poetics, especially of the English Renaissance, at Princeton University, and is an editor at large at
Cabinet magazine. He lives in Brooklyn.