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| Figment | 
enlarge | Author: Rebecca Wolff Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company Category: Book
List Price: $23.95 Buy New: $13.90 You Save: $10.05 (42%)
New (3) Used (8) from $0.08
Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 2278948
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 128 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 6.1 x 0.7
ISBN: 0393059189 Dewey Decimal Number: 811.6 EAN: 9780393059182 ASIN: 0393059189
Publication Date: May 3, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description In her second collection of poetry, the winner of the 2003 Barnard Women Poets Prize offers a series of dark and witty poems that include spoofs of and riffs on the vagaries of social interactions, postconfessional lyrics, and other edgy works. By the author of Manderley.
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| Customer Reviews:
Dickinson, Plath, and a smidgin of teen angst May 28, 2004 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Figment is a good book of poems, but the smarmy, self-deprecating voice that rears its head every now and then is less ear-catching than pitiful. Priscilla Becker does this voice far better. We're back to the confessional mode with Figment, not out on the front guard, and that's fine. The word games Wolff toys with in the poem are fun, too, but one wishes they'd add up to a little more. There is promise here, but it's not realized because of a bad attitude by the speaker, it seems. The speaker(s) of these poems seem to be traumatized by language (O Language, why did you betray me?!), but only when the speaker glories in the language do the poems succeed. See Sylvia Plath. Plath rarely cut language's throat (as so often Wolff does): you'll see it in the fragmentation of the poems. But the poems are far better than most of the stuff you read in Fence. The best poems are in the first section. Or maybe I got tired of the attitude. Either way, it's worth checking out.
"It's got to be the d's and p's, you know" May 10, 2004 3 out of 8 found this review helpful
This is Rebecca Wolff's second collection. Her first, Manderlay, out only two years before this one, was chosen by Robert Pinsky for the National Poetry Series. Now Figment appears as winner of the Bernard Women Poets Prize in 2003. Crack this vibrant book anywhere and you know instantly why this young poet is way beyond the norm and why both her books have received such plaudits. Her cogent and dramatic juxtapositions lift from jarring image and ringing syllables. Her voice emerges in these poems from new-century concerns with an absolutely contemporary diction scalding in its accuracies. Read Figment and test language at its strongest.
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