Into My Garden: Poems

Author:   David Caplan
Publisher:   Ben Yehuda Press
Volume:   13
ISBN:  

9781934730881


Pages:   74
Publication Date:   16 March 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Into My Garden: Poems


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Author:   David Caplan
Publisher:   Ben Yehuda Press
Imprint:   Ben Yehuda Press
Volume:   13
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.104kg
ISBN:  

9781934730881


ISBN 10:   1934730882
Pages:   74
Publication Date:   16 March 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

"These gentle poems invite the reader into one person's profound, ambiguous religious experience. --Jake Marmer, Jewish Review of Books These remarkable poems blend spiritual unease with religious confidence, an investigator's fascinated spirit with a sense that the poet has almost--but not quite-- come home. --Stephanie Burt A series of evocative poems that ask the big questions--about faith, doubt, love, yearning, and, most powerfully of all, the yearning for knowledge. Caplan also debates the basis of the big questions, asking 'To know/what you feel, not what you ought to feel, /is there anything harder? "" --Denise Duhamel Yes, this is a book of yeshiva study, yeshiva days and nights, and of the avid, ardent, on-fire (and sometimes doubtful and conflicted) longing to understand God's Holy Words in a world of prayerful devotion where ""each syllable / [is] said corrected or repeated until it is."" But to consign these poems solely to the realm of ""religion"" or ""theology"" or ""scholarly exegesis"" is to dismiss Rabbi Schneur Zalman's observation, ""We must live with the times. "" --Albert Goldbarth A searing, shimmering lucidity: among its many offerings, David Caplan's Into My Garden delicately, precisely, unforgettably tracks the fear and love informing Jewish study and longing. One encounters here an unusual sensibility--profound, thoughtful, rigorous, tender. An assured, commanding book which has its sights on something far more important than the merely literary. --Maureen N. McLane ""I don't remember half / the prayers I've said, even saying them,"" confides David Caplan, bringing American Confessionalism into the Chassidic tradition in this searching and luminous collection. --Srikanth Reddy David Caplan's brilliant new collection takes us into a yeshiva, and into the searching, longing, and dedication of the student mind. As he writes in Into My Garden, ""The more/ you need them, the more words demand."" I close this book thinking deeply not only about faith but also about language--how, whether in poetry or in prayer, it carries us, guides us toward understanding. --Maggie Smith A book of devotional poems that speaks poignantly, often heartbreakingly, to the believers and nonbelievers of our present moment. This brilliant book is a treasure of the Chassidic--and the human--experience. --Yehoshua November"


These remarkable poems blend spiritual unease with religious confidence, an investigator's fascinated spirit with a sense that the poet has almost--but not quite-- come home. --Stephanie Burt A series of evocative poems that ask the big questions--about faith, doubt, love, yearning, and, most powerfully of all, the yearning for knowledge. Caplan also debates the basis of the big questions, asking 'To know/what you feel, not what you ought to feel, /is there anything harder? --Denise Duhamel Yes, this is a book of yeshiva study, yeshiva days and nights, and of the avid, ardent, on-fire (and sometimes doubtful and conflicted) longing to understand God's Holy Words in a world of prayerful devotion where each syllable / [is] said corrected or repeated until it is. But to consign these poems solely to the realm of religion or theology or scholarly exegesis is to dismiss Rabbi Schneur Zalman's observation, We must live with the times. --Albert Goldbath A searing, shimmering lucidity: among its many offerings, David Caplan's Into My Garden delicately, precisely, unforgettably tracks the fear and love informing Jewish study and longing. One encounters here an unusual sensibility--profound, thoughtful, rigorous, tender. An assured, commanding book which has its sights on something far more important than the merely literary. --Maureen N. McLane I don't remember half / the prayers I've said, even saying them, confides David Caplan, bringing American Confessionalism into the Chassidic tradition in this searching and luminous collection. --Srikanth Reddy David Caplan's brilliant new collection takes us into a yeshiva, and into the searching, longing, and dedication of the student mind. As he writes in Into My Garden, The more/ you need them, the more words demand. I close this book thinking deeply not only about faith but also about language--how, whether in poetry or in prayer, it carries us, guides us toward understanding. --Maggie Smith A book of devotional poems that speaks poignantly, often heartbreakingly, to the believers and nonbelievers of our present moment. This brilliant book is a treasure of the Chassidic--and the human--experience. --Yehoshua November


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