All the Whiskey in Heaven
Selected Poems
ISBN10: 0374532656
ISBN13: 9780374532659
Trade Paperback
320 Pages
$21.00
CA$28.50
All the Whiskey in Heaven brings together Charles Bernstein's best work from the past thirty years, an astonishing assortment of different types of poems. Yet despite the distinctive differences from poem to poem, Bernstein's characteristic explorations of how language both limits and liberates thought are present throughout. Modulating the comic and the dark structural invention with buoyant soundplay, these challenging works give way to poems of lyric excess and striking emotional range. This is poetry for poetry's sake, as formally radical as it is socially engaged, providing equal measures of aesthetic pleasure, hilarity, and philosophical reflection. Long considered one of America's most inventive and influential contemporary poets, Bernstein reveals himself to be both trickster and charmer.
Reviews
Praise for All the Whiskey in Heaven
"With All the Whiskey in Heaven . . . Bernstein takes his place in the mainstream of American poetry, the very 'Official Verse Culture' he's attacked entertainingly for years—a fate awaiting all our best outsiders. Bernstein is identified with the Language poets, who emerged in the 1970s. Interested in the materiality of language, they are politically left, theoretically grounded and deeply suspicious of the lyric 'I' that speaks from the heart in traditional poems without examining its own existence in a sociopolitical power structure. Their work is often most subversive when both joining and satirizing that weary old, dreary old genre, poetry about poetry. Early Bernstein can be opaque, annoying those who see difficulty as elitist and who want poetry to be cuddly and educational. But everyone should love the later Bernstein, a writer who is accessible, enormously witty, often joyful—and even more evilly subversive.'—Daisy Fried, The New York Times
"Charles Bernstein is not just a theorist of poetry but of language itself. The ideas guiding his creative work might be summarized, albeit reductively, like this: Words are meaningless in themselves, and find significance only when we agree upon a definition. Bernstein's poetry tends to draw attention to the slipperiness of words, and to reload them with new, and sometimes better, meanings. All the Whiskey in Heaven, his first book from a major publisher and required reading for poetry enthusiasts, selects from the dozens of works the author has written over the past 35 years. Don't look here for intensely felt personal recollections or anything referencing particular biography. Instead, you'll find verbal collages in many different forms. One of the foundational figures of the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E movement, Bernstein likes to borrow from various sources—political discourse, personal correspondence, mental-health literature and advertising—and see what happens when they bump up against one another. 'I am especially interested in the treatment of depression,' one prose poem opens, but begins shifting drastically a few lines down: 'Nowadays, being a husband, father, homeowner and Jew keeps me both busy and satisfied.' The poet is often quite funny (see, for instance, 'Mao Tse Tung Wore Khakis'). Though Bernstein borrows from other sources, his poems display imagination and great formal variety. There are rambling free-verse prose poems, long poems, songs, political tirades and even aphorisms: 'War is nature's way of saying I told you so.' While much of what's here is unsettling and even difficult to understand, that's the way it's meant to be. This is the culture we've made, the one we've agreed upon—Bernstein is merely reflecting it back at us."—Craig Morgan Teicher, Time Out New York
"For man than thirty years, Charles Bernstein has been America's most ardent literary provocateur. This long-needed selection of his poetry gives us a new perspective on his work, for it shows us that the many forms he has worked in over the years are in fact a single form, the Bernstein form, and it is unique, the product of imagination unlike that of any other contemporary writer. His poems challenge you to think in unaccustomed ways. They address public matters, private matters, poetic matters—in other words, all that matters most. And, good Lord, can they ever make you laugh."—Paul Auster
"Charles Bernstein's poems resemble each other only in being unexpected. Simultaneously mad, tragic, and hilarious, they seem written to illustrate the truth of his lines: 'things are / solid; we stumble, unglue, recombine.' All the Whiskey in Heaven is a vast department store of the imagination."—John Ashbery
"Charles Bernstein is our ultimate connoisseur of chaos, the chronicler, in poems of devastating satire, chilling and complex irony, exuberant wit, and, above all, profound passion, of the contradictions and absurdities of everyday life in urban America at the turn of the twenty-first century. Bernstein's All the Whiskey in Heaven displays a formal range, performative urgency, and verbal dexterity unmatched by other poets of his generation."—Majorie Perloff
"This wonderful book confirms Charles Bernstein's position as the preeminent American poet of mental activity—delineating not simply the mind as it registers stimuli, but the more radical commitment to mind as a machine that constantly invents totally new moves and strategies in the daily battles of perception. All the Whiskey in Heaven captures thirty years of groundbreaking and revelatory work."—Richard Foreman
"A perfect introduction to the adventure that is Charles Bernstein's work. But even for those of us who have know his irrepressible inventiveness and engaged humor from the individual books, it is a boon to see here the full range of his exuberant ingenuity in battling sclerosis of word, mind—and poetry."—Rosmarie Waldrop
"This gathering of 30 years worth of work by the prominent L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poet and essayist offers a rigorous critique of the art of poetry itself, which means, among other things, a thorough investigation of language and the mind. Varied voices and genres are at play, from a colloquial letter of complaint to the manager of a Manhattan subway station to a fragmentary meditation on the forces that underlie the formation of knowledge. Bernstein's attention to the uncertainty surrounding the self as it purports to exist in poetry—'its virtual (or ventriloquized)/ anonymity—opens fresh pathways toward thinking through Rimbaud's dictum that 'I is another.' In addition to philosophical depth—which somehow even lurks beneath statements like 'There is nothing/ in this poem/ that is in any/ way difficult/ to understand'—a razor-sharp wit ties the book together: 'You can't/ watch ice sports with the lights on!' These exhilarating, challenging poems raise countless essential questions about the form and function of poetry."—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
CONTENTS
From Asylums (1975)
Asylum
From Shade (1978)
"Take then, these . . ."
Dodgem
From Sense of Responsibility (1979)
As If the Trees by Their Very Roots Had Hold of Us
Resistance
From Poetic Justice (1979)
Palukaville
Azoot D'Puund
Lift Off
From Controlling Interests (1980)
Matters of Policy
The Italian Border of the Alps
Standing Target
For Love Has Such a Spirit That If It Is Portrayed It Dies
From Stigma (1981)
March
Stove's Out
From Resistance (1983)
You
Ambient Detonation
From Islets/Irritations (1983)
Islets/Irritations
Contradiction Turns to Rivalry
The Klupzy Girl
The Measure
Substance Abuse
From The Sophist
The Simply
The Voyage of Life
The Years as Swatches
Dysraphism
Amblyopia
from Foreign Body Sensation
from A Person Is Not an Entity Symbolic but the Divine Incarnate
The Harbor of Illusion
From The Absent Father in Dumbo (1990)
Autonomy Is Jeopardy
From Rough Trades (1991)
The Kiwi Bird in the Kiwi Tree
Whose Language
Verdi and Postmodernism
Riddle of the Fat Faced Man
Of Time and the Line
From Dark City (1994)
The Lives of the Toll Takers
Virtual Reality
Reveal Codes
The Influence of Kinship Patterns upon Perfection of an Ambiguous Stimulus
Dark City
From My Way: Speeches and Poems (1999)
A Defence of Poetry
"Dear Mr. Fannelli,"
Solidarity Is the Name We Give to What We Cannot Hold
Gertrude and Ludwig's Bogus Adventure
A Test of Poetry
This Line
Riddle
From Residual Rubbernecking (2000)
Mao Tse Tung Wore Khakis
Liftjar Agate
Mall at Night
After Campion
Sunset Sail
Rivulets of the Dead Jew
From With Strings (2001)
Doggy Bag
The Boy Soprano
Johnny Cake Hollow
This Poem Intentionally Left Blank
Memories
from Today's Not Opposite Day
From Let's Just Say (2001 / Published 2003)
In Particular
Thank You for Saying Thank You
Let's Just Say
"every lake . . ."
From Some of These Daze (2001 / Published 2005)
Report from Liberty Street
From World On Fire (2002 / Published 2004)
Didn't We
In a Restless World Like This Is
Broken English
Lost in Drowned Bliss
Sunset at Quaquaversal Point
A Flame in Your Heart
From Girly Man (2006)
Castor Oil
The Bricklayer's Arms
Wherever Angels Go
War Stories
The Ballad of the Girly Man
Envoi: All the Whiskey in Heaven
Acknowledgements and Notes
Reviews from Goodreads
MEDIA
Watch
Charles Bernstein reads from All the Whiskey in Heaven
At The Renaissance Society in Chicago, IL.
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