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PANTHEON

PANTHEON

$18.00Price

ISBN: 978-0-9991994-4-2

Pub Date: Apr. 2019

Pages: 82


By Philip Memmer


Philip Memmer’s Pantheon is a collection of dramatic monologues written from the perspectives of imaginary gods. But these are not the usual mythological suspects: the voices here include such unlikely deities as the God of Error, the God of Skunks, the God of Shrugs, and the God of Lullabies. Whether their concerns are profound or ridiculous, and whether they speak with love or disdain, they share one thing in common: the faithful, mortal human to whom they speak.


    In the elegant poems of Philip Memmer’s Pantheon the gods talk back to us—the gods of error, of doubt, of extinction, of erosion. Memmer’s poems are almost mathematical in their precision, their questing after a logic that defies what’s already known. Pantheon offers beautiful, haunting, teasing encounters. The god of everywhere, the last god to speak, asks for what this impressive collection consistently accomplishes: “Surprise me.”

    —Lee Upton, author of Bottles the Bottles the Bottles the Bottles: Poems and Visitations: Stories


    One of the crucial functions of poetry is to help us see through our illusions. The poems in Philip Memmer’s Pantheon remind us that what we might call gods are masks for our own inner lives. And he offers us crossings—from the sacred to the profane; from light to shadow; from tutelary spirits to those who deny us. This is a vital, original collection.

    —Stephen Kuusisto, author of Letters to Borges and Only Bread, Only Light


    Philip Memmer is the author of four previous collections of poems, including The Storehouses of the Snow: Psalms, Parables, and Dreams (Lost Horse Press 2012); Lucifer: A Hagiography, winner of the 2008 Idaho Prize for Poetry; Threat of Pleasure, winner of the 2008 Adirondack Literary Award; and Sweetheart, Baby, Darling. His poems have appeared in such journals as Poetry, Poetry Northwest, and Poetry London; in many anthologies, including Don’t Leave Hungry: Fifty Years of Southern Poetry Review and 180 More: Extraordinary Poems for Every Day; and in Ted Kooser’s “American Life in Poetry” column. Twice a Hawthornden Fellow, he is Executive Director of the YMCA’s Downtown Writers Center in Syracuse, New York, and also serves as Associate Editor for Tiger Bark Press.

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