De Chirico's poems are as essential and as mysterious as his paintings.
--Jhumpa Lahiri
A multifaceted artist who lived in multiple languages, de Chirico was just becoming famous in France for the paintings that inspired surrealism when he returned to Italy in 1916 to enlist for the First World War. Quickly determined unfit for the front line, de Chirico was assigned to desk duty and began to write poems in his native language. Translating his iconic visual imagination into literary form, Geometry of Shadows is a gorgeous document celebrating the elasticity and innate potential of language, by an artist ever in pursuit of deeper understanding.
De Chirico's voice is worldly and roving... unified by a surprising sense of history, humanity, and a baroque absurdity.
--Publishers Weekly
[De Chirico's] poems channel the artist's restlessness and longings into uncanny, animated visions.
--James Gibbons, Hyperallergic
De Chirico was an artist between and betwixt languages and modes of expression, and his timeless, migrating perspective forever gestured at what lies beyond our grasp. His poems, as essential and as mysterious as his paintings, evoke a multitude of places, emotional hues, and liminal states of being. How thrilling to have them for the first time in English thanks to Stefania Heim's exacting and exuberant translations.
--Jhumpa Lahiri
De Chirico's paintings have, through some verbovisual alchemy, become a wordstream of uncannily syncretic images and lusciously wry juxtapositions, stretched to the point of intoxicating coherence. These ludic marvels are replete with the longing of anxiety and the desolation of perception.
--Charles Bernstein
De Chirico's poems are like his paintings, clear and opaque at once, reminding us that surrealism isn't all sewing machines and umbrellas.
--Garrett Caples
That de Chirico was a poet, and a great one, is not in dispute. He could condense voluminous feeling through metaphor and association.
--Robert Hughes