
A rich, meditative new collection of poetry from John Koethe, the "necessary and great poet" (Hyperallergic).
It's presumptuous, but if you're reading this youNamed a Best Poetry Book of 2022 by The New York Times Book Review
"John Koethe's work constitutes a plain-spoken philosophy--insofar as poetry can really be plain-spoken--endlessly asking what life is, and what poetry is, which he sees as related problems . . . 'Sometimes I think I'm terrified/That it was all a style, ' Koethe writes, 'That's had its day, and I've wasted my life.' But he remains charmingly loyal to his vocation. Poets are people who hear these voices and have to record them; they are both source and witness: 'O you I conjure up, to whom I speak as to myself, listen.' --Elisa Gabbert, The New York Times Book Review "Koethe's verse is enticingly accessible even as it plumbs the most fundamental conundrums of human life with wit and humility." --Ron Charles, The Washington Post "In Koethe's relaxed, prose-like style, long sentences meander until his thoughts, taking a philosophical turn, dead end in a reverberant image or a metaphor like the enigmatic smile in 'Daddy, ' one of the best poems in this striking collection." --Diane Scharper, Library Journal (Starred Review) "[Koethe's] poetry has a long-limbed, discursive feel that involves a constant searching that we might associate with the study of philosophy . . . Koethe offer[s] models of what it actually means to reach through and beyond." --Ian Pople, The High Window Press