In this ambitious collection, Kevin Stein enters the volatile
intersection of private lives and larger public history. In poems
variously formal and experimental, improvisational and narrative, wisely
silly and playfully forlorn, Stein renders the human carnival flexed
across the tattooed bulk of "history's bicep."
Musical and refreshingly unaffected, Stein's poems yoke the domains of
high and low art. His poems address subjects by turns surprising, edgy,
and humorous. They offer musings on the Slinky and the atomic bomb,
elegies for a miscarried pregnancy and the late physicist Edward Teller,
reflections on night-shift factory work and President Eisenhower's golf
caddy, and meditations on the politics of post-colonialism and a
youthful antiwar streaking incident. Against this vivid backdrop parades
a motley cast of American characters seeking wiry balance in a fragile
world.