SHOOSTER
Product image

Hotel Lautreamont

Ashbery, John
45 USD
Date
1992
Category
Poetry
Description
Hotel Lautréamont invites readers to reimagine a book of poems as a collection of hotel rooms: each one empty until we enter it, and yet in truth abundantly furnished with associations, necessities, and echoes of both the known and the alien. The collection’s title poem is itself an evocative echo: Comte de Lautréamont was the pseudonym taken by Isidore-Lucien Ducasse, a radical nineteenth-century French writer about whom little is known except that he produced one remarkable presymbolist epic prose poem called The Songs of Maldoror and died of fever at the age of twenty-four in a hotel in Paris during Napoleon III’s siege of the city in 1870. Addressed to lonely ghosts, lingering guests, and others, the poems in Hotel Lautréamont present a study of exile, loss, meaning, and the artistic constructions we create to house them.
Excerpt
Now, silently as one mounts a stair we emerge into the open but it is shrouded, veiled: We must have made some ghastly error. To end the standoff that history long ago began must we thrust ever onward, into perversity?
Similar Items
Self-Portrait In A Convex Mirror Poems
A Wave