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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
In Zev Shanken’s poetry, time is a magician that cuts the writer in half. Then cuts him again, then again, then again. Until, at last, there’s nothing left but the pieces of self that we call poems. In ‘Memory Tricks, ’ his best poem, a loving son tries to console his mother for her loss of memory. You cannot name anything because you cannot remember anything. You cannot learn anything
because you cannot connect the old and the new. And yet, miraculously, through some trick of love, you still know how to say a blessing. Life goes on–even after memory fails you, your life remains holy. There’s much more of this in Shanken’s work. A lifetime of grappling with love and suffering, with the redemptive paradoxes of wisdom and failure. Shanken is a poet of witty seriousness
and earned insight on each subject he touches.
–Stephen Bluestone, winner of the Thomas Merton Prize
The combination of deep knowledge, revelation, and wit makes Zev Shanken’s collection of poems an unexpected and pleasurable read.
–Esther Cohen, author of Breakfast with Alan Ginsberg
Wisdom flows through this book along with wise humor; not that Zev Shanken is a wiseguy, but sometimes… . Tracing a life richly lived, this scheme provides only a subtle structure for these cleverly constructed poems placed expertly in a flowing arc that culminates in an insightful pastiche of rabbinic literature.
–John J. Trause, author of Exercises in High Treason
Zev’s poetry surprises and delights on the first reading. At the second reading
you realize: These are poems.
–Rabbi Rim Meirowitz, Rabbi Emeritus, Temple Shir Tikvah,
Winchester, Massachusetts
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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
In Zev Shanken’s poetry, time is a magician that cuts the writer in half. Then cuts him again, then again, then again. Until, at last, there’s nothing left but the pieces of self that we call poems. In ‘Memory Tricks, ’ his best poem, a loving son tries to console his mother for her loss of memory. You cannot name anything because you cannot remember anything. You cannot learn anything
because you cannot connect the old and the new. And yet, miraculously, through some trick of love, you still know how to say a blessing. Life goes on–even after memory fails you, your life remains holy. There’s much more of this in Shanken’s work. A lifetime of grappling with love and suffering, with the redemptive paradoxes of wisdom and failure. Shanken is a poet of witty seriousness
and earned insight on each subject he touches.
–Stephen Bluestone, winner of the Thomas Merton Prize
The combination of deep knowledge, revelation, and wit makes Zev Shanken’s collection of poems an unexpected and pleasurable read.
–Esther Cohen, author of Breakfast with Alan Ginsberg
Wisdom flows through this book along with wise humor; not that Zev Shanken is a wiseguy, but sometimes… . Tracing a life richly lived, this scheme provides only a subtle structure for these cleverly constructed poems placed expertly in a flowing arc that culminates in an insightful pastiche of rabbinic literature.
–John J. Trause, author of Exercises in High Treason
Zev’s poetry surprises and delights on the first reading. At the second reading
you realize: These are poems.
–Rabbi Rim Meirowitz, Rabbi Emeritus, Temple Shir Tikvah,
Winchester, Massachusetts