Handwriting
Material type:
- 9780224093804
- 811.54 / OND
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Jaffna Processing Center | 811.54 / OND |
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JA00004159 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The poems in Handwriting are memories of Sri Lanka- the rituals and traditions, history and geography, the smells and tastes and colours of his first home. Here are sunless forests, cattle-bells, stilt-walkers 'with the movement of prehistoric birds'; a Buddha buried 'so roots/like fingers of a blind monk/spread for two hundred years over his face'; 'saffron and panic seed, lotus flowers, sandalwood; a lover, who lay her fearless heart/light as a barn owl/against him all night'.
Handwriting is an elegy for lost childhood, for a culture and language lost to the turmoil of history, but it is also a glimpse of the source of the writer's delicate, erotic, mysterious imagination. By focussing on writing frankly about beautiful things, Ondaatje takes the poems beyond narrative to these simple, deeply sensual images - given to us in a language that is pared, cursive and exquisite.
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
Ondaatje is undoubtedly best known for his novel, The English Patient, on which the award-winning film was based. Good as that novel was, it is still a pity that more people havent read his poetry, which is deeply evocative and suffusedbut never overburdenedwith sensuous imagery. Here he revisits his Sri Lankan heritage, re-creating the past in sparkling takes: Once we buried our libraries/ under the great medicinal trees/ which the invaders burned; And in our Book of Victories/ wherever you saw a parasol/ on the battlefield you could/ identify the king within its shadow. Buddhas abound, as do Cormorant Girls, saffron, rice, cattle bells, and, of course, water. A poem picks up one image, then starts the next few lines with another, so that images glance off the page, refusing to settle down into straightforward storytelling. The result is a sort of mosaic of feeling and light that is affecting reading. For all poetry collections.Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
Ondaatje's first book of poetry or prose since his bestselling novel The English Patient (1992) offers Western readers knowingly attractive, nostalgic views of his native Sri Lanka. The poet playfully takes to the role of translator ("Aliganaya-`the embrace/ during an intoxicated walk'/ or `sudden arousal/ while driving over speed bumps' ") in a not-quite-wry langourÄa departure from the exuberance of earlier work. Generally forgoing the first person, and settling into a short, refined line, Ondaatje disappears into the role of an observer, most sucessfully in poems like "Driving with Dominic in the Southern Province We See Hints of a Circus": "The Tattered Hungarian Tent/ A man washing a trumpet/ at a roadside tap/ Children in the trees,/ one falling/ into the grip of another." At times, the self-conscious need to explain interrupts the flow of images, as when bathing women encounter "An uncaught prawn hiding by their feet/ The three folds on their stomachs/ considered a sign of beauty," and the poet's engagements with the politics and violence of Sri LankaÄ"there were goon squads from all sides"Äcan seem forced. But the terse form seems to push the poet towards moments of lapidary beauty. Ultimately, these calmly seductive visions form a surprisingly coherent emotional autobiography, representing Ondaatje's finest work as a poet. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
Ondaatje's poetic sensibility is everywhere present in the novel that made him famous, The English Patient (1992), just as his feel for the enchantment of stories infuses his newest poems. He notes that these elegant and somber new works were written in Sri Lanka and Canada, but it is the former that is most evident in setting and tone, although his spare and meticulously balanced syntax owes much to the poetry of ancient China. As the title suggests, the emergence of the art of writing piques Ondaatje's interest, and he sees it everywhere: "Handwriting occurred in waves, / on leaves, the scripts of smoke." War haunts his imagination, too, and in a pair of stunning poems, "Buried" and "Buried 2," he contrasts the serenity of the Buddha with the turmoil and devastation of violence as he envisions the earth gathering in monks and warriors. Desire itself, Ondaatje perceives, is full of darkness and danger, but we are attuned to the beauty of shadows, the coolness and warmth of jade, and in that we are blessed. --Donna SeamanThere are no comments on this title.