{"product_id":"old-current","title":"Old Current","description":"\u003cb\u003eMacArthur Fellowshipwinning poet Brad Leithauser returns with his first new collection in more than a decade, a collection that recalls the delicacy and intimacy of his early, award-winning volumes, and embraces the wisdom of age.\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eAs snappy as a dinner jackets red silk lining, as appealing as a piano interlude in jazz, Brad Leithausers robust felicity is a balm in grim times. Its also the perfect vehicle for nostalgia, regret, and surprise, forces that animate his first collection in more than a decade. By turns laugh-out-loud funny and deeply thoughtful, this collection balances wisdom and practicality, as with deft care Leithauser easily, often unexpectedly, juggles off-rhymes and old forms and new. \u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e  The book unfolds like a five-act play, moving from chattier poems to dramatic denouements. In the collections two Darker sections, we meet folks learning to say goodbye, from a three-year-olds cry I love you so loud (A Young Farewell) to a reckoning with words formed Forty-Five Years On. Time presses in continually. In Abroad and At Home, the author shows us himself, in younger form: sixty-six, then twenty-seven, catapulted back in memory to Tokyo by a single bite of food (The Old Current). Then, eight, and awed to remember the beauty of a lone jet overhead. With Updikean wordplay he recalls: Porch steps, sunset; a warm, gathering gloom. \/ Behind me, five lives: two parents plus the three \/ Brothers with whom I share my room (A Single Flight).    \u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e  As Leithauser takes the measure of a world expanding behind him, he manages to become weightless, freer, wild again. He also refuses to give up second chances. In the Lighter interlude, we chance upon Icarus and His Kid Brother. Were treated to dactyls and lively quatrains, a sloppy kiss thats not quite bliss, musings on sobriety, and what comes to pass when life turns lickerish and liquory (Double Dactyls, Six Quatrains, The Muses, and Kisses After Novocaine). The energies yoked within Leithausers formalism overflow formality. \u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e  Often elegiac and yet packed with humor, contemplative, consoling, and informed by the soul of a storyteller, Brad Leithausers latest book of poetry is a warming, enrapturing read that returns us to the ebbs and flows of lifes shores. Im sixty-six, the author writes, and could anything \/ Reliably be more heartening \/ Than stray hints that lifes brightest events. \/ Are, however far-flung, strung \/ Along a long old current?","brand":"MediaPlace","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57195110203774,"sku":"NW9780593802809","price":17.29,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0817\/1379\/1261\/files\/9780593802809.jpg?v=1778541500","url":"https:\/\/mediaplace.com\/products\/old-current","provider":"MediaPlace","version":"1.0","type":"link"}