BLACK VALENTINE, David Abel

BLACK VALENTINE

David Abel

Publisher: Chax Press
PubDate: 1/1/2006
ISBN: 9780925904577
Binding: PAPERBACK
Price: $10.00
Quantity Available: 22
Pages: 32
 

Poetry. This lovely addition to Chax Press' line of chapbooks features Portland poet David Abel's elegiac sequence on love and grief. Written in New York following the 1988 death of Robert Duncan but published in 2006, Abel's poem takes as its point of departure a line from Christopher Marlowe, who writes "Black is the beauty of the brightest day." From this ambiguous, mournful line, Abel fashions a beautifully spare set of poems that encompass and intertwine concerns both philosophical and quotidian, displaying both sadness and acceptance in the face of death. As he writes, "My heart climbs/like a fish, dumb/and I swallow stones:/love's incomprehension/smoothed by/water." David Abel, co-curator of the Spare Room reading series, is a poet, editor, bookseller, raga singer, and poker player who moved to Portland in 1997 after stints in New York and Albuquerque.

David Abel was born in Salt Lake City in November, 1956, and schooled there and in South Florida, Eastern California, the Mid-Hudson Valley, and the Rio Grande Valley. After tenures in New York City and Albuquerque (where he established the Bridge Bookshop, and Passages Bookshop & Gallery, respectively), he relocated to Portland in 1997. He is the author of numerous artists's books and objects -- including Rose, Selected Durations, and Threnos (all with Katherine Kuehn), and Let Us Repair and While You Were In (disposable books) -- and several chapbooks, including Black Valentine (Chax) and Twenty- (Crane's Bill). His most recent chapbook, Commonly, will premiere at this reading, along with two new issues (one for each reader) of the broadside journal Envelope, which he edits.

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