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JEFFREY SCHULTZ’s poems have appeared in Boston Review, Indiana Review, Missouri Review, Prairie Schooner, Poetry, and elsewhere and have been featured on the PBS Newshour’s Art Beat and Poetry Daily. Schultz has received the Discovery/Boston Review prize and a Ruth Lilly Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation. He lives in Los Angeles and teaches at Pepperdine University.The poems in What Ridiculous Things We Could Ask of Each Other comb through the rubble of everyday life in search of the shards of beauty and hope that might still be found there. At the same time, these poems struggle to conceive of the beautiful and the hopeful in some way that can escape the purely naive. They confront loss and wrong, but because Elegy / is stupid, if you can avoid it, they seek, so much as is possible, not to offer consolation in exchange for what ought not to have happened in the first place. If making the world right with itself would be simultaneously the simplest and the most difficult thing, these poems try to imagine the moment right before that change would become possible and try to imagine the questions we’d be confronted with then, in hope of opening the possibility of imagining the answers.Poems exploring the consequences of our choices, possibilities of change, and how we come to regret things we could avoidJeffrey Schultz’s stunning debut collection is filled with danger, omen, and fire—as appropriate to a book with an ode To the Unexploded H-Bomb Lost in Tidal Mud off the Coast of Savannah, Georgia. The poems include J., a character who carves a path between John Berryman’s Huffy Henry and Ernesto Trejo’s E.—a soul set loose, unmoored even, who says The World’s Not as It Should Be but also revels in modern life and its detritus, whether that’s the soul as rooms for rent, the last pay phone, or your blog. Schultl˝
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