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University of California Press

About the Book

Speaking in the wake of empire, of terrestrial love and of the collapse of traditional literary forms, the protagonist of this collection of poetry reconstructs a world from the language of encyclopedias, instruction manuals, and the literary legacies of Wallace Stevens, W. G. Sebald, and Joseph Conrad. The prefatory lyric, "Burial Practice," imagines the posthumous narrative of "then’s" that follows an individual's extinction; in the poem "Aria," a stagehand steps onto the floorboards to wax poetic after the curtain has dropped on an opera; and the extended sequence of "Circle" poems obliquely revisits Dante's ethical landscape of the afterlife.

Many of these poems were written while Srikanth Reddy worked for a rural literacy program in the south of India, a fact reflected in the imagined postcolonial world of lyrics such as "Monsoon Eclogue" and "Thieves’ Market." Yet the collection moves beyond the identity politics and ressentiment of postcolonial and Asian-American writings by addressing the fugitive dreams of shared experience in poems such as "Fundamentals of Esperanto." Mobilizing traditional literary forms such as terza rima and the villanelle while simultaneously exploring the poetics of prose and other "formless" modes, Facts for Visitors re-negotiates the impasse between traditional and experimental approaches to writing in contemporary American poetry.

About the Author

Srikanth Reddy's poems have appeared in various journals, including APR, Grand Street, Fence, and Ploughshares, and his critical writing has been featured in publications such as The New Republic, The Chicago Tribune, and American Literature. He has held fellowships from the Mellon Foundation, the Whiting Foundation (in the Humanities) and the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing. A graduate of the Iowa Writer's Workshop and doctoral candidate at Harvard University, Reddy is currently the William Vaughan Moody Writer-in-Residence at the University of Chicago.

Table of Contents

Burial Practice

I.
Corruption
Loose Strife with Apiary
Hotel Lullaby
First Circle
Evening with Stars
Second Circle
Sundial
Raven & Eclipse
Centaur
Sixth Circle
Everything
Eighth Circle

II.
Thieves’ Market
Inner Life
Jungle Book
Ninth Circle
I. The Interpreter
II. Luck
III. Canisters
IV. Home
V. The Planet
Scarecrow Eclogue
Fifth Circle
Waiting for the Eclipse in the Black Garden
Monsoon Eclogue

III.
Fundamentals of Esperanto
Fourth Circle
Chariot with Torn Bodice
Third Circle
On Difficulty
Welkin
Seventh Circle
Gryphon
Acid House
Sonnet
Palinode
Aria
Corruption (II)

Notes
Acknowledgments

Reviews

"Reddy's debut collection is one of iridescent beauty and wistful mystery."
Booklist
"This is one of the top volumes in the New California Poetry Series. . . . [These poems] deserve a great deal of attention."
Bloomsbury Review
“A first book worth reading and rereading.”
Pleiades: A Journal Of New Writing
“A remarkable book of poetry. . . at its best, it is subtly enchanting and genuinely frank. Reddy’s “here” is most certainly a place I will return to.”
Bookslut.com
“A thrilling debut.”
Double Room
“Astonishing in its emotional depth, rhetorical facility, formal control, and lightness of touch . . . fresh and unforgettable art.”
Boston Review
“The good fortune for readers is that Reddy’s reach is as admirable as it is ambitious. Rarely does a first book have such depth and heft.”
Harvard Review
The decay of life--literary as much as biological--provides the light by which world and word are seen. The delicate solemnity (and just as delicate, wit) that marks the beauty of what Reddy is doing is tied intimately into these spectral considerations.
The Colorado Review
"In this altogether brilliant collection, the various but carefully sequenced (and deeply consequential) poems unfold in a world undergoing eclipse. It is a transient, unsettling, and fascinating phenomenon, the casting of shadows by shadows (of experience, literature, language, the natural sun) traveling across the totality of the known world: here. The process does not produce negation. It is, on the contrary, an odd plus. And the darkness is never complete; it is surprised into perceptibility by sources of counter-illumination, among them wit, intelligence, and, above all (as underlying all), love."—Lyn Hejinian

"Reddy's book is new, utterly confident, clear, true to itself. It is about any world in which any one of us in love can learn something about what has happened to us--a world utterly and deeply known: ecstatic and forlorn. This is also a confident guide to our best life and to the language of that unknown place in which we bring to mind for the first time what we think and feel. At the end, Reddy's book leaves us with a deeper understanding of the wisdom of all good guides and poets: 'Where one goes, one goes alone.'"—Allen Grossman, Mellon Professor in the Humanities, Johns Hopkins University and author of Sweet Youth

"The present is a word for only those words which I am now saying" writes Reddy in this profoundly moving first collection. And, indeed, a search for the nature of the 'present' continuously animates this stunning, anguished yet level-headed attempt to reconstruct a history of our kind as if from some as-yet unknown vantage point. Striving for a complex objectivity, the book explodes prior notions of orientation—geographic, historical, cultural—and recovers from the debris a profoundly trustworthy reorientation, political as well as emotional. Reddy speaks to us fully self-conscious and, strangely, fully innocent. It is a mesmerizing voice."—Jorie Graham

Awards

  • Asian American Literary Award 2005, Asian American Writer’s Workshop