The
capstone of a distinguished literary career, James Baldwin Smoking a
Cigarette and Other Poems is Baron Wormser's eleventh book of poetry. It
speaks to matters that have haunted and obsessed the author for a
lifetime?especially the ways that a finite poem can intersect with the
infinitude of being.
The book
is arranged like a work of fiction, with titled chapters and with single poems
of a personal nature standing between each chapter?a thread woven throughout
the book. Each chapter reflects themes of longstanding concern: the duality of
masculine and feminine, political history, literary progenitors, prophetic
voices, and the ways people struggle with the circumstances in which they find
themselves.
The
Polish poet Adam Zagajewski once noted that poetry is ?an impossible art.? In
this collection, Baron Wormser reflects on what he has learned about that art
over the course of a lifetime?an inspiring but also chastening experience.
?Poetry
is useful in giving complexity its due,? the author says, because we live in an
age of drastic reductionism, characterized by violent rhetoric, blind
partisanship, and outright lying?forces that militate against imaginative
reflection and the empathy that can grow out of that reflection. Here are poems
that seek to braid thought and feeling?this but also that?poems
that register the thrill of being but also linger and provoke, long after
they've been read.