
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 13 reviews on

"Jane Hirshfield's poems often feel like whole landscapes, graciously embracing the widest view and the tiniest sequins at once . . . Her longtime practice of Soto Zen Buddhism and her commitments to scientific knowledge and respect blend to create some of the most important poetry in the world today." --Naomi Shihab Nye, The New York Times Magazine
"Reading her work, I catch myself thinking that Hirshfield is the poet who orchestrates silences . . . It isn't easy these days to find a poet who can do this while being also perfectly articulate and clear. Reading Hirshfield, I find myself coming back to Mahmoud Darwish's idea that clarity is our ultimate mystery." --Ilya Kaminsky, The Paris Review "Intimate, tender free verse . . . Hirshfield perfectly captures our individual sense of lostness, faced with undeniable catastrophe, while invoking our collective responsibility." --Fiona Sampson, The Guardian "Ledger is a watershed . . . a culmination. [Hirshfield's] voice, always inclusive and generous, swells to new levels of relevance, revelation, and resonance in these pages . . . Many poems in Ledger feel eerily prescient about our current confinement, as in 'Cataclysm' when 'fish unschool' and 'sheeps unflock to separately graze' . . . Rather than give in to despair, these poems place their faith in simple perseverance, coupled with humble, personal action. They offer a larger, longer planetary perspective and provide the spiritual food needed to sustain the effort." --Rebecca Foust, Women's Voices for Change "A new volume of poems by acclaimed poet Jane Hirshfield is an event. After reading the poems in Ledger--a capacious, varied volume--it seems as if ordinary life is richer and deeper than before . . . A Hirshfield poem is an exercise in opening the self . . . The value of such work is beyond question." --Magdalena Kay, World Literature Today "The vigilant, deeply observed poems in Ledger are an antidote to collective blindness." --Jessica Zack, San Francisco Chronicle"[Hirshfield] understands the world in all its happiness, melancholy, unpleasant surprise and moments of resilience." --Amy Bloom, The New York Times
"When a poet's purpose is tied to our own fate, we tend to notice the poems more seriously because it's not only the 'dexterous pen and the beautiful hand, ' but a moral clarity we want . . . This happens while reading Hirshfield more than most . . . Writers are denizens of a complex world, figuring it out for us. They restore consciousness, rinse off language, and create a finer air. Hirshfield has done this for many years. Ledger continues that literary history. It is another invitation to find the many choices within ourselves." --Grace Cavelieri, The Washington Independent Review of Books "[Hirshfield's] stark, powerful poems are crafted so simply they seem effortless. Constructed largely of nouns and verbs . . . it's hard to understand how they manage to evoke such a range of emotion. And yet they do, with a voice that at times seems like an old-world prophet, at times like a Zen Master . . . What emerges as one reads this book is a sense of mourning for what's lost, and a piercing delight in what is left. By calling attention to the facts and figures of loss, by offering up a reckoning, Ledger literally as well as figuratively reminds us of what counts." -- Meryl Natchez, ZYZZYVA "Poet Jane Hirshfield fuses science, loss, and wonder in her new collection, Ledger . . . A tender and fearsome accounting of how humans have used and abused the planet. The poems are infused with loss, bafflement, and possibility." --Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, The Open Notebook "Hirshfield's ability to distill a single image with vodka clarity is on full display in her ninth collection . . . Whatever exquisite form these poems take, they carry a haiku spirit." --Stephanie Pruitt-Gaines, BookPage "Hirshfield tackles some of the biggest questions we face as living beings . . . Her poetry and essays move between scales vast and miniscule, balancing awe and mundanity, the out of the ordinary and the everyday." --Marie Scarles, Tricycle "Masterful . . . Hirshfield urges a reckoning of human influence on--and interference with--the planet . . . [Her] world is one filled with beauty, from the 'generosity' of grass to humanity's connection to the muskrat. This is both a paean and a heartbreaking plea." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Zen poetry for a bleak era . . . An exploration of the capacity for life, its value and purpose . . . Hirshfield's hand is deft . . . We look very closely at an object or statement before lifting it to discover what else it can tell us about ourselves; a light shined outward, then the camera angle shifts and the light is back on us . . . Hirshfield's collection does exactly what we expect, and a little more--more of the personal, more of the contemporary world and its problems, more transcendence through art." --Genevieve Walker, San Francisco Chronicle