Jerome Rothenberg holds a premier place in the American avant-garde. The
poems in Seedings, his newest collection, leap across history. Past
and future become entwined, and the intricate paths reaching from one
century and one millennium into another double back into timelessness
("as the twentieth century winds down/the nineteenth century
begins/again"). The long title poem that opens this fin-de-siecle
gathering is, appropriately, a celebration of poets and friends--such as
Robert Duncan, George Oppen, and Paul Blackburn--who have entered what
Rothenberg calls "a Paradise of Poets." "Seedings" is followed by four
other sections, "Improvisations" is a series of high-energy poems in a
mode of open writing characteristic of much of the poet's experimental
work, while "Twentieth Century Unlimited" is an assemblage of travel
poems and personal observations. "An Oracle for Delfi" revisits and sees
anew a classical landscape long the inheritance of Western poets. A
final sequence, "14 Stations," joins the concise verbal techniques of
gematria (traditional Hebrew numerology) with the stark agonies of the
Holocaust last explored by Rothenberg in Khurbn & Other Poems (1989).