Description
Description
In Isfahan, Iran, the eponymous palace has only twenty pillars--but, reflected in its courtyard pool, they become forty. This is the gamble of Davoudian's magical, ruminative poems: to recreate, in art's reflection, a home for the speaker, who is unable to return to it in life.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
Armen Davoudian transforms his Iranian childhood with Proustian sensuality. His images embody a psychological web of forces that shape the self as it accrues the complexities of experience. His cosmopolitan voice spans time and space and literary traditions. The echo chamber of his language will stay with you.--Peter Balakian, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Ozone Journal
A poem should make an argument about its making, and a collection of poems should make an argument about the making of poetry itself. In this formally radical debut, Armen Davoudian shows how rhyme enacts longing for a homeland left behind; how meter sings to a lost beloved; and how a combination of the two can map a self--or idea of the self--relinquished so that a new life, and all the happiness it deserves, can take shape. Such arguments are difficult to achieve, especially while investigating exile, queerness, and the histories we receive and rewrite with nuance. The Palace of Forty Pillars indeed, and astonishingly, achieves this.--Paul Tran, author of All the Flowers Kneeling
These are songs of adolescence and love, of migration and history, brilliant and deft and heartfelt. Under the tutelary gaze of ancestral poets, Davoudian honors his queer amalgam of sources and makes of English sonnets and Persian ghazals something musical, memorable, and new. A magisterial book--reading it, I felt enchanted and transformed.
--Richie Hofmann, author of A Hundred Lovers
Sonnet sequences frame this tight but adventurous volume. . . . frank in its cultivation of sensuousness, of beauty.-- "Poetry Society of America"
Handsome. . . . resounds with assured formal attention. . . . the erotic and the everyday intersect.-- "LitHub, A Best Poetry Collection of March"
Davoudian's lyrical genius is on full display in this debut. . . . a live wire of deeply held emotion that makes every line crackle on the tongue.-- "Chicago Review of Books, A Best Book of March"
Berkeley poet Armen Davoudian names his debut collection after a landmark in his birthplace of Isfahan, Iran. Dual identities and reflections emerge as a theme in these poems about migration, queerness and finding the meaning of home.-- "The San Francisco Chronicle, A Best Book of Spring"
Impressive... the poems feel like meditative guides of wisdom.-- "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"
Lyrically and formally deft, this debut collection by Armen Davoudian beautifully charts a queer and exilic coming of age.-- "Electric Literature"
Introduces the arrival of a future star in modern poetry.-- "Bay Area Reporter"
Some of the best [poems] I've read in quite some time. . . . there's a sense of wanton pleasure in language.-- "The Telegraph"
Publishing Information
Publishing Information
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