In A Gallery of Ghosts, John Gery once again shows himself to be a master of poetic forms. In this collection, Gery鈥檚 distinctive poetic voice lends seemingly orderly poems a sharpness that cuts close to the bone. These poems convey both the bliss and pain of our existence, never shying away from life鈥檚 uncomfortable truths. While each of the five sections in this book offers distinctive pleasures, Gery鈥檚 self-portraits are particularly honest and perceptive. In 鈥淭he Wrong, Tormented Sea,鈥 Gery writes: 鈥淚鈥檝e never learned to live within my means.鈥 In A Gallery of Ghosts, we see the exquisite work of an insatiable mind, a poet always reaching for the highest fruit on the tree.
"John Gery picks up the implicit challenge, pursuing unflinchingly the mysteries of human identity, of the self and its place in the world鈥inally, though, what arrests attention here is the provisional quality of Gery鈥檚 poems鈥攏ot that they are unfinished, indeed he writes with high polish鈥攂ut that they arrive with the breath of a life about them, an intensely personal quality marked by such generous vulnerability and openness to the future that his work can burn the reader used to a literature not so determined to play for keeps." 鈥Philip Dacey
"Metaphysical wit, emotional complexity, and surreal comedy infuse these crackling reports from a world not unlike our own, but seen with a wonderful freshness and a complete absence of can鈥檛 that makes it very much John Gery鈥檚. A Gallery of Ghosts is a collection not to be missed." 鈥Charles Martin
John Gery, Research Professor at the 91直播, directs the Ezra Pound Center for Literature, Brunnenburg, Italy. His seven books of poetry include Enemies of Leisure (1995), Davenport鈥檚 Version (2003), A Gallery of Ghosts (2008), and Have at You Now! (forthcoming 2014). He has recently co-edited two anthologies of poetry, Poets of the Sala Capizucchi (with Caterina Ricciardi and Massimo Bacigalupo, 2011), and In Place of Love and Country (with Richard Parker, 2013), as well as Ezra Pound, Ends and Beginnings: Essays and Poems (with William Pratt, 2011).