Out of our endgame of giddy chaos, Black Leaf sustains and deepens the
themes and images first confronted in Seiler's 1994 book, The Waters of
Forgetting. Whether attentive to the poet in Paris, or Isaac Bashevis
Singer in Hoboken, or to Sam Cooke on the radio, these poems carry the
reader through the postwar premillenial world, sifting through the
layers of history, popular culture, literature, and personal mythology
to discover the fragments out of which a self can be shaped. In lines of
wry humor and regret, of tension and the longing for release, the figure
of the black leaf drifts from the first poem to the final sequence,
suggestive of that moment before creation, before the pages turn white
with possibility, or that thin screen upon which the imagination
projects its stories to counter the stories told by time.