The Award-winning poet Carl Phillips grapples with issues of
authority, identity, and beauty in these sensual and deeply intelligent
essays
The coin of the realm is, classically, the currency that for any culture
most holds value. In art, as in life, the poet Carl Phillips argues,
that currency includes beauty, risk, and authority-values of meaning and
complexity that all too often go disregarded. Together, these essays
become an invaluable statement for the necessary-and necessarily
difficult-work of the imagination and the will, even when, as Phillips
states in his title essay, the last thing that most human beings seem
capable of trusting naturally-instinctively-is themselves, their own
judgment.