This generous volume of new and selected poems by Christopher Howell
encompasses three decades of his distinguished work, drawing upon all of
his previous books. Dreamless and Possible chronicles his wide range
of interests, expressed by blending elements of the surreal with
biography, imagist economy with a storyteller's informality. It also
shows the development of his signature style, reflected, as poet Albert
Goldbarth has written, in poems "connected by deep thought worn lightly,
and by large vision writ in small details."
These are poems of palpable force. Howell thinks out loud as he works
his way through what charms, challenges, and defines the human project.
He questions, tests images and associations, and leaps, trusting
himself, into midair. In consequence, the cerebral energy propels his
poems beyond statement and into startlingly evocative modes, grappling
with and sifting profound matters of memory, imagination, and grief,
tempered always by joy.