The Plurality of Worlds of Lewis
Jacques Roubaud author Rosmarie Waldrop translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Dalkey Archive Press
Published:1st Mar '95
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This collection of prose and poetry elaborates on themes explored in Roubaud's Some Thing Black, which the Times Literary Supplement called "a harrowing book...an elegy for our time." As in the earlier collection, Roubaud grapples with the grief he continues to feel at the untimely death of his young wife. In parts 1 and 2, he uses the possible existence of many worlds as a means by which to transcend the trauma of this unbearable loss. (David Lewis's book On the Plurality of Worlds provided the inspiration and title for Roubaud's book.) These poems also rage against the limitations of poetry itself, which can only clarify the exactness of his grief, not assuage it. In part 3, Roubaud uses a mathematically precise form to explore the idea of form.
"Precisely measured and deeply moving..." -- PW "Ghostly presences inhabit these spaces that these lyric poems and fluid fictions construct. Rosmarie Waldrop's translation brings to the surface the obsessive, repetitive thought patterns that characterize grief... Roubaud... asks language to propose equivalencies and transformations." -- Susan Smith Nash, Texture #6 "Writing as a poet-philosopher, Roubaud... casts a delicate net of language to apprehend ideas that most compel him..." -- Publishers Weekly
ISBN: 9781564780690
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
109 pages