Rudman skillfully explores his own life and past.
Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry (1995)
Mark Rudman – poet, essayist, translator, and teacher – has consistently pursued questions of human relationship and identity, and in Rider he takes the poetry of autobiography and confessional to a new plane. In a polyphonic narrative that combines verse with lyrical prose and often humorous dialogue, Rudman examines his own coming-of-age through the lens of his relationships with his grandfather, father, step-father, and son. These memories emerge against the background of a family history anchored in the traditions of Judaism and the culture of the diaspora.
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MARK RUDMAN is Adjunct Professor in the writing programs at Columbia University and New York University, editor of the literary magazine Pequod, and recipient of numerous awards. His most recent book if Diverse Voices (1993). Poet, essayist, and translator, Mark Rudman's recent books include Provoked in Venice (1999), Millennium Hotel (1996), and Realm of Unknowing (1995).
In an elegant, elegiac poem that recovers his relationship with his rabbi stepfather, "the Jewish Rider," Rudman ( Diverse Voices ) has created a formal tour de force in which grief, memory and passion are dramatically played out in an elongated question and answer session. The poem takes the form of the poet answering--sometimes clearly and briskly, sometimes obliquely and aphoristically--the incessant questions of an inquisitive, knowledgeable, sometimes scornful voice since "so much between us had to be left unresolved." As the drama unfolds, a remarkable man emerges, as well as his relation to his stepson, their distrust and ambivalence. Rudman's bold poetic device results in a poem prosaic and lyrical by turns, punctuated by Whitmanesque passages, fragmented couplets and prose poems of childhood reverie. So compelling is this elegy that we fully believe in the deceased rabbi who posthumously enters the poem to critique the elegy itself ("you still got a lot of facts wrong"), right the record ("without me you would have ended up in reform school"), scold his son ("Remember moderation"), and reaffirm his quarrelsome love.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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