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poetry
Fruitlands
Kate Colby
Counter Daemons
Roberto Harrison
Animate, Inanimate Aims
Brenda Iijima
The Mudra
Kerri Sonnenberg
Emptied of All Ships
Stacy Szymaszek
Euclid Shudders
Mark Tardi
>> The House Seen from Nowhere
Keith Waldrop
translations
Notebooks 1956-1978
Danielle Collobert
Face Before Against
Isabelle Garron
Four from Japan: Contemporary Poetry & Essays by Women
Kiriu Minashita, Kyong-Mi Park, Ryoko Sekiguchi, Takako Arai
Inner China
Eva Sjödin
Another Kind of Tenderness
Xue Di

Main | Excerpt

the house seen from nowhere

In Keith Waldrop's The House Seen from Nowhere, we are invited into a meditational drift that explores the 'tense emptiness' of being . The construction of all that surrounds us, the carpentry, wavers between order and the instability of order, is manifest in syntax and etymology. In this house, which is all things--body, fortress, residence, logic, language, mortality--we find mirrors, echoes, and spirits: "the figures light/delineates not/the light itself." Where we might use Zeno's Paradox to understand the relation between the knower and the known, it is in Keith's house that we find the paradox of 'empty disctinctions,' the tension between asymmetrical opposites. The house exists "not to inclose but/to include//without redemption."