Drawing on two decades worth of award-winning poetry, Marilyn Hacker's
generous selections in A Stranger's Mirror include work from four
previous volumes along with twenty-five new poems, ranging in locale
from a solitary bedroom to a refugee camp.
In a multiplicity of voices, Hacker engages with translations of French
and Francophone poets. Her poems belong to an urban world of cafés,
bookshops, bridges, traffic, demonstrations, conversations, and
solitudes. From there, Hacker reaches out to other sites and personas: a
refugee camp on the Turkish/Syrian border; contrapuntal monologues of a
Palestinian and an Israeli poet; intimate and international exchanges
abbreviated on Skype--perhaps with gunfire in the background.
These poems course through sonnets and ghazals, through sapphics and
syllabics, through every historic-organic pattern, from renga to
rubaiyat to Hayden Carruth's "paragraph." Each is also an implicit
conversation with the poets who came before, or who are writing as we
read.
A Stranger's Mirror is not meant only for poets. These poems belong to
anyone who has sought in language an expression and extension of his or
her engagement with the world--far off or up close as the morning's
first cup of tea.