Nervous Systems                                       Nervous Systems on  Amazon  Powell's  BN

poems by   W  I  L  L  I  A  M     S  T  O  B  B

 

Cover Image"Lit up even through the darkness of mortal disconnect, Nervous Systems charts the synaptic leap between peril and joy, the near rhyme of ruin and rain while William Stobb manages for us 'a party at his epicenter.'  Deep-delved and thrown: 'ha ha time, ha ha vanishing point.'  What a generous invitation.  How could you miss it?"

                        Dean Young, author of Embryoyo

"There is a strange and elegantly accomplished serenity in the poetry of William Stobb: a serenity of tensions attenuated to their uttermost, of sinister imagery so deeply attended to and known that it becomes adorable.  More than ever before, we need a poetry of hard peace.  William Stobb, thank heaven, is writing it."

                                       Donald Revell, author of

                                       Pennyweight Windows

 

"Stobb's well-titled debut begins smart and ends tender: it starts with crisply layered bits of scenes, many from the rural or industrial Midwest, then moves through sometimes melancholy, sometimes delighted reflections on the poet's young daughter and on his anxious middle age. Landscapes compel in Stobb's writing whether their components, encountered in real life, would delight or appall. Here is an inventively stereoscopic view of a gravelly rural trail, with 'Twelve thousand version of twelve dozen ivy blossoms / in the compound eye'; there are rusted-out 'northern resorts / where men in fishnet hats drink coffee'. Filmic quick cuts (and metaphors from film and music) suggest the techniques of August Kleinzahler (who selected the book for the National Poetry Series); luminous descriptions call to mind the early Robert Hass. Yet Stobb turns his attention ultimately from things back to the people who live amid them. Midway through the volume, we find Stobb 'hoping our nostalgia and middle-aged foreboding / would give way to an elegance that had always been east of us.' Stobb's best poems—at the start and the end of the volume—include not only observation and tenderness but jazzy dissonance: 'I don't know my mangles // from my obtuse angles.... These are words for things.'"

                                      from Publisher's Weekly