Daniel Simon’s Summer Reads
Editor in Chief Daniel Simon picks three books that promise to unsettle, console, and inspire.
Float
Random House
I found myself tantalized by this excerpt from the latest book by the Canadian poet, classicist, and translator: “Eve changes human history by putting a free mark on Adam’s apple. Why does she do this? . . . Maybe she was catastrophizing. Adam had just performed the primordial act of naming, had taken the first step toward imposing on the wide-open pointless meaningless directionless dementia of the real a set of clichés that no one would ever dislodge or want to dislodge—they are our human history, our edifice of thought, our answer to chaos. Eve’s instinct was to bite this answer in half.”
A Messenger Comes
Singing Horse Press
A Messenger Comes is a book of (broken) beginnings and (fragmented) endings. In this fifth verse collection by Israeli poet Rachel Tzvia Back, the messenger of the title arrives in the book’s epigraph, in need of the broken spirit of a mourner. A gift from the poet after the death of my brother in 2016, the book is an elegy for both the author’s father and her sister. When loss “impales” the heart with its loosened arrow, the poet offers “sorrow songs” in remembrance and protest, strewing love’s “ragged relics” across the page.
The Conference of the Birds
Trans. Sholeh Wolpé
W.W. Norton
What first caught my eye about this newly translated masterpiece of Persian literature was the stylized bird on the cover; what drew it in was my discovery that Rumi considered Attar his master. Attar, a twelfth-century Sufi mystic poet from northeastern Iran (a pharmacist by training), presents an allegorical tale about the soul’s quest for self-knowledge, meaning, and, ultimately, the Divine.