Donald Revell's eighth collection, My Mojave, concerns itself with
beauty, with the way in which the divine pours through the eye and into
the soul. The poems seek their gods in that place where the natural and
human worlds come together, where miserable cardinals comfort/The broken
seesaws/And me who wants no comfort/Only to believe. With tightly
crafted, sensual lines, the poems are keenly aware of the deserts we
inhabit, all the while marveling at the effortlessness of poetry and
worship in a world so magnificently capable of proliferating itself and
its beauty.
Short Fantasia
The plane descending from an empty sky
Onto numberless real stars
Makes a change in heaven, a new
Pattern for the ply of spirits on bodies.
We are here. Sounds press our bones down.
Someone standing recognizes someone else.
We have no insides. All the books
Are written on the steel beams of bridges.
Seeing the stars at my feet, I tie my shoes
With a brown leaf. I stand, and I read again
The story of Aeneas escaping the fires
And his wife's ghost. We shall meet again
At a tree outside the city. We shall make
New sounds and leave our throats in that place.
Praise for Donald Revell's There Are Three:
The touch throughout is extraordinarily refined, the -language trimmed
and delicate beyond praise. It's almost as terrible and pure as Bach's
music for solo violin, so to speak, deep into the strings. . . .--Calvin
Bedient, The Denver Quarterly
There Are Three is a grave and compelling book, the kind which demands
rereading.--Poetry