Brian Glaser is the author of five books of poetry and many essays on poetry and poetics. He lives in Santa Ana, California, and teaches art and history at Chapman University.
"Brian Glaser uses poetic technique, intellectual material, memory,
and emotion in unexpected and moving originality. Like a good
teacher, the poems come right at the reader with bald questions and
make the reader struggle with them. The reader doesn't feel alone
though. The quest for 'inventive solutions to intractable
questions' is shared painfully, humorously, and with great
tenderness. We are left with a wry wisdom and raw elements, in a
space between all thought, where the real activity occurs
silently."-Beth Jacobs on Contradictions in Journal of Poetry
Therapy
"Brian Glaser is a spiritual seeker, which involves continually
testing wisdom from several spiritual traditions. But the major
emphasis is on an effort to produce as absolute a clarity as
possible about elemental features of his life-natural, personal,
familial, social, and political. Innocence becomes as fundamental
as air; desire as fundamental as water. So poetry itself has to
renounce metaphor and elaborate form in order to hew as closely as
possible to honest renderings of surprising moments where the
shadows lift and the mind responds to something worth enduring.
These moments seem utterly bare. The poetry resides in the
resonance of what comes to matter as it just comes into language,
often weaving sites of contradiction that also serve as means of
recognizing how intractably solitude, social pressure, and familial
ties serve to foster one another. Poetry becomes a process of
imagination ceaselessly adjusting to shifts in possibilities of
responsiveness. And the moral life becomes inseparable from
fostering careful attention to what creates and binds our
passions."-Charles Altieri, author of Reckoning with the
Imagination: Wittgenstein and the Aesthetics of Literary
Experience; professor of English, University of California,
Berkeley
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