Southern California is one of two significant places in Laurence
Goldstein's fourth collection of poems. A native of Los Angeles, the
author re-encounters the vivid ghosts of an exotic personal landscape:
Criswell the TV prophet, Madame Nhu at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel,
Mickey Cohen in a downtown deli, Bob Hope in a photo shoot with the
poet's family. From the Pacific boardwalk to Death Valley, these poems
enliven their borderlands with pungent language and dramatic incident.
Goldstein then takes the reader to Ethiopia, the setting of a long
dramatic monologue narrated by a young American woman seeking the
reincarnation of the medieval Christian potentate Prester John, for help
in the apocalyptic wars of the twenty-first century.
His most ambitious book to date, the subjects in this collection range
from the aging pear tree and the domestic living room, to Nordic witches
and Nazi demons. Some poems are in fixed forms including the villanelle
"Rock Star," the sonnet translation from Verlaine, "Langueur," and the
rhymed quatrains of a narrative poem adapted from a short story by
Arthur Miller. Other poems employ organic style to explore the poet's
situation, or predicament, in the culture he has outlived and the
culture he has inherited.