"Three cheers for Robert Phillips. We need more poets like
him."--Robert Richman, New York Times
Robert Phillips is a prominent figure in what has been called America's
neglected "transition generation"--poets born in the late 1930s and
early 1940s. Spinach Days is his sixth full-length collection,
following his critically acclaimed Breakdown Lane (Johns Hopkins,
1994), named a Notable Book of the Year by the New York Times. In
content and in its various use of forms, Spinach Days is Phillips'
most innovative book yet. There are long narratives and short lyrics,
villanelles and somonkas, haiku and found poems, free verse and
eclogues, on subjects ranging from St. Francis to the Holocaust, from
Jung's concept of the anima to a particular bit of American folklore
on the gangster John Dillinger. Throughout, the poet's memory is the
cohesive force, mixing events of childhood with adulthood, rural life
with big-city life, love with loss, and humorous events with tragic
ones. Phillips reveals himself to be a master of closure, and he writes
as one who delights in the liveliness of language and wordplay.