Skip to product information
1 of 10

Robert Lax

Poems (1962-1997)

Poems (1962-1997)

By Robert Lax, edited by John Beer

      • Poems (1962-1997) gathers 35 years of Robert Lax’s work, rarely published and largely composed in solitude on the island of Patmos. Compiled and edited by the poet’s former assistant John Beer, this selection reflects–through meditative sequences in striking vertical columns–Lax’s rigorous attention to the world around him, and his relentless aspiration to new ways of writing.


      • A necessary read for poets and archaeologists, who delight in finding treasures that others have ignored.
        Library Journal

        The simplicity of Lax’s poems can be surprisingly overwhelming—their repetitive language and narrow, columnar forms belie not a hidden complexity, but a meditative, expansive power.
        Thomas Ross, Tin House

        This is extraordinary poetry made from the very stuff of the world around us. It is the nearest I have come to alchemy: gold and light spun from earth, words working in one way at the very limits of experiment and form, yet also working at the centre of human perception and thought, appealing to both intellect and heart.
        Rupert Loydell, Stride Magazine

        Lax’s work is visual poetry, experienced as the eye interprets the arrangement of words on the page, but there is also great care in the word choices; Lax is equally sensitive to their referential value...Poems (1962-1997) is an elegant book that will, with any luck, make Lax’s work more readily available to new audiences.
        Elizabeth O'Brien, New Pages

        The book is a treasure and inspiration, a testimony of a life lived roundly, in full circle, and full of healthy contradictions.
        Anthony Bannon, The Buffalo News

        Lax has for too long been a cult figure; his originality and significance insufficiently recognized. If justice is poetic, Beer’s selection will do something to rectify this.
        David Wojahn, Numéro Cinq

      • Robert Lax (1915-2000) published dozens of volumes of poetry and prose journals with small presses in Europe and the United States, as well as A Catch of Anti-Letters, correspondence with his lifelong friend Thomas Merton. Educated at Columbia University, he worked as an editor for The New Yorker, Jubilee, and PAX. From 1962 to the end of his life, he made his home in the Greek islands, first Kalymnos and ultimately Patmos.

        John Beer is the author of The Waste Land and Other Poems (Canarium, 2010), which won the Norma Farber First Book Award from the Poetry Society of America. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he lived on the Greek island of Patmos for two years in the late 1990s, where he served as literary assistant to Robert Lax. He currently teaches creative writing at Portland State University; previously, he reviewed theater for Time Out Chicago. 

Publication Date: November 2013

ISBN# 9781933517766 (7x9, 400pp, paperback and limited edition hardcover)

Regular price $25.00
Regular price Sale price $25.00
Sale Add to cart
View full details