cover image THE UNSUBSCRIBER

THE UNSUBSCRIBER

Bill Knott, . . Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $20 (122pp) ISBN 978-0-374-26415-4

Knott's wordplay, compression and bitingly skeptical point of view have given his verse (especially his many sonnets) cult status for decades. His first effort since Laugh at the End of the World: Collected Comic Poems (2000) shows his verbal agility at work in all sorts of short forms. Some of the love poems here, whose careful simplicity recalls Robert Creeley, may stand among Knott's best, as when he compares a romantic couple to a facing-page translation: "we fear closing the book/ will bring us face to face, mouth to mouth with/ that tongue we've always/ lost and can never kiss." The sonnet "Sub/Unsub" makes an elegant answer to Elizabeth Bishop's "Sonnet"; "A Lesson from the Orphanage" makes an appalled response to the Iraq war—"If you beat up someone smaller than you/ they won't (and histories prove this) tell." A sheaf of very short poems (several taken from Poetry magazine and the New Yorker ) showcases Knott at his epigrammatic best; a sequence of wordier poems attacking war, sexism and masculinity (many with lengthy footnotes) shows him at a far lower level ("my crime my Y/ chromosome"), as does a clotted set of adaptations and translations at the end. It can be hard to know when Knott strives deliberately for awkwardness and when this self-described "windowkeeper/ of the Tower of Babel" has simply let down his guard. (Nov.)