"Words say too much to let you know the truth.'' George Quasha's
torqued, enigmatic proverbs create unlikely balances among discrepant
engagements. Waking from Myself is the sixth volume published of
George Quasha's "preverbs," an invented poetic genre that's the flipside
of "proverbs"--instead of giving capsules of wisdom, they awaken
language to its inevitable ambiguities in the face of complex
truth-telling. The vectors of these marvelous poems work at cross
purposes, keeping each other aloft. If William Blake's "Proverbs of
Hell" are poetry, then George Quasha's preverbs are like a close cousin.
Its core question is: can poetry say the unsayable?