Reviewers of David Wojahn’s eighth volume of poetry, World Tree (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2011), have been quite taken with the book, claiming that this is David’s most ambitious collection yet. A notice of the book accompanied the appearance of a new poem, “In the Attic,” when it was highlighted in the Chronicle of Higher Education. In the CHE piece, poet Lisa Russ Spaar wrote, “In the nearly 30 years since Richard Hugo selected his first book, Icehouse Lights, for the Yale Younger Poets prize in 1982, David Wojahn has contributed to American arts and letters a personally and politically intrepid body of ever-evolving poems.” “Ever-evolving” strikes the right chord for this collection. The book’s thoughtfully-designed cover reproduces Darwin’s first diagram of an evolutionary tree (1837). Prior to the CHE article, our own Blackbird presented a special edition of “Ochre.” The Blackbird version included several new features along with the images that were paired with the 25 poems in the original print edition.
This collection challenges esthetically and intellectually (a section at the back is devoted to annotations for the poems, explaining sources and references!). The poem that is most personally poignant and evocative, and maybe David will himself agree, is “Another Epistle to Frank O’Hara.” It honors Frank O’Hara’s 1964 elegy on the death of Billie Holiday in 1959, “The Day Lady Died.” O’Hara’s poem notes the muggy summer afternoon when he saw the newspaper headline on a street corner in New York. Like O’Hara’s work and like Philip Levine’s, who also admires O’Hara’s work and has written on this same O’Hara poem, David’s work might be abstract but is not in the clouds. It’s grounded in time and place. David’s epistle poem is “another” letter to O’Hara–not the first one David has written to his muse and spiritual kinsman. And surely not the last.
Wonderful, David. Congratulations.
Terry Oggel
Chair, Department of English