
Imago
Brian Swann(Author)
Johns Hopkins University Press
Published on 28. March 2023
Book
Paperback/Softback
96 pages
978-1-4214-4567-0 (ISBN)
Description
An exuberant collection of poems celebrating art, nature, and humanity.
This various and vital poetry collection, in rich language and sharp detail, spans the rural and urban, country and town, and foreign and domestic. Tracing the vagaries of the self, these poems record and transmute biography from an English youth to the trials and challenges of aging in America. Memorable for its exuberant voice and exacting eye, Brian Swann's Imago is awake to the natural world as well as the world within. From the half-page title poem to the multi-section "Elegiac," this volume is striking in its largeness, its tone evolving from self-indicting to ecstatic and self-transcendent. This collection, the author's fourteenth, is moving both as art and as testament.
Imago unfolds much like a piece of music. It is a continuum by which Swann sees nature and art interwoven in the ways they emerge and change. In "Grief and Magritte," Swann muses upon "all of us snagged in a net whose skeins tangle in night sky / where one star dreams another." The title poem focuses on an insect "on its way through the changes, the patterns / of what led up to it, the catches and releases . . . saying now, and now" till "splitting down the back" such changes "release what was always there." Brian Swann's poems, moving in their candor, read as though they have always been there, too.
This various and vital poetry collection, in rich language and sharp detail, spans the rural and urban, country and town, and foreign and domestic. Tracing the vagaries of the self, these poems record and transmute biography from an English youth to the trials and challenges of aging in America. Memorable for its exuberant voice and exacting eye, Brian Swann's Imago is awake to the natural world as well as the world within. From the half-page title poem to the multi-section "Elegiac," this volume is striking in its largeness, its tone evolving from self-indicting to ecstatic and self-transcendent. This collection, the author's fourteenth, is moving both as art and as testament.
Imago unfolds much like a piece of music. It is a continuum by which Swann sees nature and art interwoven in the ways they emerge and change. In "Grief and Magritte," Swann muses upon "all of us snagged in a net whose skeins tangle in night sky / where one star dreams another." The title poem focuses on an insect "on its way through the changes, the patterns / of what led up to it, the catches and releases . . . saying now, and now" till "splitting down the back" such changes "release what was always there." Brian Swann's poems, moving in their candor, read as though they have always been there, too.
Reviews / Votes
Swann's Imago is a very satisfying book, with range and depth. There is clear ambition, too, as we have seen in poems which deal with ageing and death, to the births of the butterflies. All those years of apprenticeship show in this very good, very convincing writing.-The High Window
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Baltimore, MD
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 6 mm
Weight
135 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4214-4567-0 (9781421445670)
DOI
10.56021/9781421445687
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
Brian Swann teaches at Cooper Union. He is the author, editor, or translator of more than 50 books and 14 poetry collections, including In Late Light and Sunday Out of Nowhere: New and Selected Poems.
Content
Proem
Locus
History
Composed
Pulses
Them
Telegraph Wires
Three Mallards
The Feather
Tropical Fish
I. The Garden
Running
Nationalism
The Basil on the Sill
Bach in the Garden
Skunk
Pastoral
Sonnet of Intimacy
Shopping for Snacks
The Moon Bridge at Ch'ien
A Bird
The Garden
II: Elegiac
The Screen Door
Making Sense
Jokes
The Code
The Silence
Elegiac
Eternity
Grief and Magritte
The Dog
Death
The Same in All Directions
William Blake and Space Travel
Theater
Light
III: Turtle Moon
Bats
Serenade
The Passion
Churchyard
Why
As With a Child's Eye
North
Silence
Butterfly
Imago
The Wind's
A Sleeping Rock
Turtle Moon
Notes on the Poems
Acknowledgments
Locus
History
Composed
Pulses
Them
Telegraph Wires
Three Mallards
The Feather
Tropical Fish
I. The Garden
Running
Nationalism
The Basil on the Sill
Bach in the Garden
Skunk
Pastoral
Sonnet of Intimacy
Shopping for Snacks
The Moon Bridge at Ch'ien
A Bird
The Garden
II: Elegiac
The Screen Door
Making Sense
Jokes
The Code
The Silence
Elegiac
Eternity
Grief and Magritte
The Dog
Death
The Same in All Directions
William Blake and Space Travel
Theater
Light
III: Turtle Moon
Bats
Serenade
The Passion
Churchyard
Why
As With a Child's Eye
North
Silence
Butterfly
Imago
The Wind's
A Sleeping Rock
Turtle Moon
Notes on the Poems
Acknowledgments