Telephone Poles

In this article, we will explore in depth the topic of Telephone Poles, a topic that has captured the attention of many people in recent times. _Var1 is an intriguing concept that has generated debates and discussions in various fields, from academia to the world of entertainment. Throughout this article, we will examine the different facets of Telephone Poles, unraveling its meaning, implications, and impact on modern society. Through a detailed and rigorous analysis, we will delve into the complexity of Telephone Poles, providing a comprehensive and multidisciplinary vision that allows our readers to thoroughly understand this phenomenon.

First edition

Telephone Poles is the second book of poetry written by American writer John Updike.

Publication

The collection was published by Knopf in 1963.

Reception

In The New York Times, critic X.J. Kennedy wrote, "Of younger writers in America today, surely John Updike is our leading pyrotechnist. Few can make words so obligingly sizzle and flash, so clearly light up the landscape of suburbia. While dazzling his readers in the last five years with five novels and books of stories, Updike simultaneously has been turning out satiric verse and light poetry galore: 66 pieces in this new collection, most of them first contributed to The New Yorker. He is, it seems, like some designer of Explorer rockets who hasn't enough to do, in his spare time touching off displays of Roman candles...It also shows Updike to be on occasion a poet of rare depth and competence. We ought to have expected this — if not from his earlier book of light verse, The Carpentered Hen, then from the grim lyricism of the novel, Rabbit, Run; or from the excellent prose poem 'Archangel' in the story collection, Pigeon Feathers. Admirers of his fiction will see his verse as clearly the work of his hand. The same compassionate scrutiny informs such a poem as "The Short Days," with its evocation of a suburban morning:

Then red rims gild the gutter-spouts;
The streetlamp pales; the milk-truck fades;
And housewives — husbands gone — wash doubts
Down sinks and raise the glowing shades.

In Updike's verse, too, is his wry awareness of the small absurdities we live with daily."[1]

References

  1. ^ X.J. Kennedy, "Telephone Poles and Other Poems," The New York Times, September 22, 1963.