A poetry collection that grapples with the tragicomic nature of
language, memory, love, work, and the performative self.
Though at times whimsical and witty, the poems in Hastings Hensel's
Ballyhoo inhabit the world beyond and between the punchline. In
tightly controlled meditations on language's limits and its necessity,
as well as on the many forms that humor takes--comedy, laughter, farce,
clowning, parody, and more--Hensel navigates fine lines between joy and
sadness, jokes and cruelty, reality and illusion, and irony and
sincerity.
Universal in scope, the 47 poems in Ballyhoo are richly idiomatic and
evocative. They are also frequently grounded in the southern Atlantic
coast with its particular ecology, characters, history, and myth. The
pleasure in reading these poems comes from the original connections
Hensel makes between the literary and the gritty: an elegy set in a bait
shop, Twelfth Night's Feste delivering a monologue in a bar, a
villanelle about a murder on a cruise ship.
These intelligent, insightful poems remind us of the frail but important
relationships between comedy, memory, and identity. Ballyhoo offers a
sobering examination of the tragicomic nature of the world.