Acknowledgments, xi
In My Memory Eddie
Now
Back to Country with Pulitzer
Song Years
In Memoriam: (Harriet)
Sarcastic Caustic Ironic Satiric Sardonic Funny: Wounding Poetry
Disgust
When the Parents Went
Mental Mommy
The One at the Oars
Family Plot
Your Tales of the Suburbs
Handmade Shoes
The Worry of the Far Right
Who’s in Charge of the Culture Now?
One for the Guys and for Robert DeNiro
Corner Man
Jack Warden
Larkin
Third Star with Guggenheim
Woman in the Summer Southern Night
Fat Southern Men in Summer Suits
Twenty-Three
Twenty-Four
San Francisco 1970, Years After the Summer of Love
Best Friend
Peyote
The Old Man and the Motorcycle
About the Money
Ronald Beaver’s Life in England
I Get a Feeling
Off to the Country of Cancer
This Summer
First Marriage
Beautiful, Sane Women
Ever Upon the Gad
Our Last Period Together
The Cruel Numbers of Love
So We’ll Go No More
Cold and Soon
Always
Soon the City
"Liam Rector''s new book, The Executive Director of the Fallen World , expresses a stringent yet generous tone toward the profane, ignoble world of his title. Without necessarily forgiving himself or the rest of greedy and needy humanity, Rector chooses instead a dry, somewhat charitable acknowledgment that the world is . . . worldly."-Robert Pinsky, "Poet''s Choice," Washington Post Book World
"Defiant to the last, mordantly funny, humane, and loving."
"Poet, educator, and founding director of Bennington College's Graduate Writing Seminars, Liam Rector died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound last August. In recent years, Rector had been successfully treated for colon cancer and heart disease, and many noted his preoccupation with the theme of surviving illness and facing down death in The Executive Director of the Fallen World, his last and finest poetry collection. Whatever the mysteries surrounding Rector's suicide, the book is full of fallen, disillusioned personae, many of them confronting terminal illness and death, and all of them easy to identify with the poet himself. But Rector's hard-won insight and incandescent gallows humor lighten the way, intermixing pathos with practical wisdom, tragedy with relentless sass. Often his mordant irony and slang diction prove to be his best defenses against despair, as in "So We'll Go No More," which presents a dying speaker's valediction to his lover: "Cancer, heart attack, bypass-all // In the same year? My chances / Are 20%! And I'm fucking well / Ready, ready to go." -Robert Schnall, Boston Review
"[Rector''s] third book in 20 years is mature and confident almost to the point of swaggering. In sometimes prose-like, sometimes musical tercets, Rector spits bile at a culture in decline . . . . There are a number of standouts, especially ''Now,'' in which an entire life is cynically, but movingly, compressed into just over four pages: ''... a few years/ To play around while being/ Bossed around.'' The reward is hard-nosed humility and gratitude after surviving failed marriages and nearly terminal cancer, which ''gave this to me: being/ Able to sit, comfortably.''"-Publishers Weekly
Liam Rector is founder and director of the graduate Writing Seminars at Bennington College.
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Imprint: University Of Chicago Press
Distributor: Chicago Distribution Center
Publication Date: 10-15-2006
Pages: 96
Measurements: 8.20in X 6.13in