"I regard Lease as the best poet of his generation. This is a poetry filled with stories that are built to last. This is a poet who will become a major voice in American poetry."--David Shapiro
With singular grace and musicality, these accomplished poems summon the voices of a divided country. With a storyteller's rhythm, Lease braids humor, political bite, psychological intensity, and lyric beauty, taking us to a place of warning, critique, and elegy.
Joseph Lease is the author of three critically acclaimed books of poetry: Broken World, Human Rights, and The Room. His poems have also been featured on NPR and published in Bay Poetics, The AGNI 30th Anniversary Poetry Anthology, VQR, The Paris Review, and elsewhere. Lease's poem "'Broken World' (For James Assatly)" appeared in The Best American Poetry, edited by Robert Creeley and David Lehman.
"I regard Lease as the best poet of his generation. This is a poetry filled with stories that are built to last. This is a poet who will become a major voice in American poetry."--David Shapiro
With singular grace and musicality, these accomplished poems summon the voices of a divided country. With a storyteller's rhythm, Lease braids humor, political bite, psychological intensity, and lyric beauty, taking us to a place of warning, critique, and elegy.
Joseph Lease is the author of three critically acclaimed books of poetry: Broken World, Human Rights, and The Room. His poems have also been featured on NPR and published in Bay Poetics, The AGNI 30th Anniversary Poetry Anthology, VQR, The Paris Review, and elsewhere. Lease's poem "'Broken World' (For James Assatly)" appeared in The Best American Poetry, edited by Robert Creeley and David Lehman.
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Joseph Lease’s critically acclaimed books of poetry include Broken World and Human Rights. His poem Broken World’ (For James Assatly)” was selected for The Best American Poetry 2002 (Scribner). His poems have also been featured on NPR and published in The AGNI 30th Anniversary Poetry Anthology, Bay Poetics, No Gender, Denver Quarterly, Colorado Review, Fence, Paris Review, Talisman, and elsewhere.
"Testify . . . is as taut and thrilling, as full of urgency and
humility as I’ve come to expect [Lease’s] work to be. . . . This is
poetry that gathers in handfuls of the world and offers them up as
crystalline images, smells and sounds. This is poetry not as an
idea but as an experience evocative of a vast multiplicity of
ideas. . . . In the end, the most accurate, and perhaps the most
useful, description of Lease’s work [is] it’s beautiful. Read
it.”The Rumpus
"[Testify] is a culmination of the poetic gestures and lyric voice
he has been developing since The Room and it solidifies his
position as one of the more striking voices of his generation. . .
. Testify is, in a sense, Joseph Lease’s testimony of being an
American in America at this precise moment in time. This is a
documenta mantra evenwhich verges on the holy. . . . Invoking the
language of what is at stake forces us to participate in the
discourse surrounding itand this book tells us that our testimony,
like its own, is necessary."New Pages
"Testify’s beauties come from the tentativeness of its tone. . . .
Lease offers no prescriptions and suffers no proposals. There is
anger in Testify, and there is love. But unlike Whitman and
Thoreau, Lease offers no whiff of redemption, and unlike Jeremiah
before them, no consolation. Lease might be on to something.
Perhaps we have too many aspiring prophets already. Lease is
suggesting that discomfortnot certaintymight provide enough
sanction for a prophetic stance today. Such a stance is
confrontational but not in the regular way. It needs to say
something different, something that you do not hear everywhere you
go. In a world of 24/seven coverage, Testify is trying to do just
that.”Tablet
What I also admire in Lease’s book is his attention to the
textural shape of each poem. Words find their line as a dancer
finds and fills her space. Like the master Danish poet Inger
Christensen in her book alphabet, Lease crafts each poem with
attention to the weight of each word. . . . I am struck by how each
poem is an embodied utterance: the individual body of this speaker
with his particular experience as well as the body politic, torn
and frayed.”. . . As many of the dreams of the 2008 election have
perished, and as Britain burns with mass lootings brought on by
lower to middle-class frustration, Lease’s testimony rings even
more vividly.”The Midtown Review
"Testify, a great book, places itself at America’s street corner of
Origin and Decay. A delicate, tentative lyricism arises full of
want, and Lease is its astonished keeper.” Gillian Conoley
"The magic of these poems lies in their careful and insistent
repetitions, their powerful cadence, their delicate choosing, their
brilliant clarity. Lease is one of only a few poets writing now who
is brave enough and skilled enough to take on the biggest crises of
our time while remaining absolutely dedicated to the art of the
poem.”Julie Carr
Joseph Lease is the actual real and important deal. He’s Whitman.
He’s Lincoln. He’s Lester Young before the world won. Which is to
say, Container of Multitudes/Voice of the Epic. Melancholic
Visionary. Cool Breeze Speaker of a new Vernacular. This is such
important work, such consolationpersonal and communal. I’ve just
sent it to everyone I know.” Janet Desaulniers
"Thoreau wrote, 'All perception of truth is an analogy.' Joseph
Lease's Testify is an investigation and proof of this recognition .
. . All of a piece, the connections between the self and the
society, the self and the world, the self and the self, have rarely
been explored so bravely or presented so movingly."Denver
Quarterly
"In Testify . . . I'm delighted to find that Lease has continued to
write sincere, musical poemspoems which continue to resist smarmy
irony." Drunken Boat
"A new volume by Joseph Lease is cause for celebration by the most
discerning readers and writers of poetry. . . . Rarely does a book
of poetry release universal truths so skillfully and passionately
by pinpointing such surprising and specific images as There’s a
fist of meat in my solar plexus / and green light in my mouth and
little chips of dream flake / off my skin.’ Lease carries the
reader with him as he allows supreme vulnerability to be sung. . .
. If you do not buy any other poetry book this year, buy Testify by
Joseph Lease. Read it aloud to anyone you love. And read it
carefully, specifically, reverently, while trying to keep your
voice clear (your voice will break). The breakage will be real,
beyond mere sentiment; it will be the fist of meat in [the] solar
plexus’ (11). You will experience word choice recovering the
ingredient that found your pores. All of them.”Jacket2
"[T]hese are poems full of grace, exhilaration and wrenching
tenderness . . . This is an important, innovative book that taps
into jarring suspensions central to American experience."Colorado
Review (Summer 2012 Edition)
"[Testify] is filled with a clear eye towards our future by reading
the tea leaves of our present. . . . Lease appears to be the
singular talent able to absorb all of this and focus it into one
66-page beam of poetic truth and beauty. I would testify to
that."H_NGM_N
"Lease's poetry enacts the questioning, challenging plea of a
speaker struggling to stay connected to his own judgement, his
faith in humanity, in the power of the collective to feel,
recognize itself and act. This work, among the best poetry of our
time, is full of conflict, contradiction and the vitality of
thinking. That is, thinking while feeling while thinking and trying
to sift through it all, and back, finally, to some enduring shelter
in a self-aware language."HTML Giant
"Testify . . . is as taut and thrilling, as full of urgency and
humility as I’ve come to expect [Lease’s] work to be. . . . This is
poetry that gathers in handfuls of the world and offers them up as
crystalline images, smells and sounds. This is poetry not as an
idea but as an experience – evocative of a vast multiplicity of
ideas. . . . In the end, the most accurate, and perhaps the most
useful, description of Lease’s work [is] it’s beautiful. Read
it.”—The Rumpus
"[Testify] is a culmination of the poetic gestures and lyric voice
he has been developing since The Room and it solidifies his
position as one of the more striking voices of his generation. . .
. Testify is, in a sense, Joseph Lease’s testimony of being an
American in America at this precise moment in time. This is a
document—a mantra even—which verges on the holy. . . . Invoking the
language of what is at stake forces us to participate in the
discourse surrounding it—and this book tells us that our testimony,
like its own, is necessary."—New Pages
"Testify’s beauties come from the tentativeness of its tone. . . .
Lease offers no prescriptions and suffers no proposals. There is
anger in Testify, and there is love. But unlike Whitman and
Thoreau, Lease offers no whiff of redemption, and unlike Jeremiah
before them, no consolation. Lease might be on to something.
Perhaps we have too many aspiring prophets already. Lease is
suggesting that discomfort—not certainty—might provide enough
sanction for a prophetic stance today. Such a stance is
confrontational but not in the regular way. It needs to say
something different, something that you do not hear everywhere you
go. In a world of 24/seven coverage, Testify is trying to do just
that.”—Tablet
“What I also admire in Lease’s book is his attention to the
textural shape of each poem. Words find their line as a dancer
finds and fills her space. Like the master Danish poet Inger
Christensen in her book alphabet, Lease crafts each poem with
attention to the weight of each word. . . . I am struck by how each
poem is an embodied utterance: the individual body of this speaker
with his particular experience as well as the body politic, “torn
and frayed.”. . . As many of the dreams of the 2008 election have
perished, and as Britain burns with mass lootings brought on by
lower to middle-class frustration, Lease’s testimony rings even
more vividly.”—The Midtown Review
"Testify, a great book, places itself at America’s street corner of
Origin and Decay. A delicate, tentative lyricism arises full of
want, and Lease is its astonished keeper.” —Gillian Conoley
"The magic of these poems lies in their careful and insistent
repetitions, their powerful cadence, their delicate choosing, their
brilliant clarity. Lease is one of only a few poets writing now who
is brave enough and skilled enough to take on the biggest crises of
our time while remaining absolutely dedicated to the art of the
poem.”—Julie Carr
“Joseph Lease is the actual real and important deal. He’s Whitman.
He’s Lincoln. He’s Lester Young before the world won. Which is to
say, Container of Multitudes/Voice of the Epic. Melancholic
Visionary. Cool Breeze Speaker of a new Vernacular. This is such
important work, such consolation—personal and communal. I’ve just
sent it to everyone I know.” —Janet Desaulniers
"Thoreau wrote, 'All perception of truth is an analogy.' Joseph
Lease's Testify is an investigation and proof of this recognition .
. . All of a piece, the connections between the self and the
society, the self and the world, the self and the self, have rarely
been explored so bravely or presented so movingly."—Denver
Quarterly
"In Testify . . . I'm delighted to find that Lease has continued to
write sincere, musical poems—poems which continue to resist smarmy
irony." —Drunken Boat
"A new volume by Joseph Lease is cause for celebration by the most
discerning readers and writers of poetry. . . . Rarely does a book
of poetry release universal truths so skillfully and passionately
by pinpointing such surprising and specific images as `There’s a
fist of meat in my solar plexus / and green light in my mouth and
little chips of dream flake / off my skin.’ Lease carries the
reader with him as he allows supreme vulnerability to be sung. . .
. If you do not buy any other poetry book this year, buy Testify by
Joseph Lease. Read it aloud to anyone you love. And read it
carefully, specifically, reverently, while trying to keep your
voice clear (your voice will break). The breakage will be real,
beyond mere sentiment; it will be the `fist of meat in [the] solar
plexus’ (11). You will experience word choice recovering the
ingredient that found your pores. All of them.”—Jacket2
"[T]hese are poems full of grace, exhilaration and wrenching
tenderness . . . This is an important, innovative book that taps
into jarring suspensions central to American experience."—Colorado
Review (Summer 2012 Edition)
"[Testify] is filled with a clear eye towards our future by reading
the tea leaves of our present. . . . Lease appears to be the
singular talent able to absorb all of this and focus it into one
66-page beam of poetic truth and beauty. I would testify to
that."—H_NGM_N
"Lease's poetry enacts the questioning, challenging plea of a
speaker struggling to stay connected to his own judgement, his
faith in humanity, in the power of the collective to feel,
recognize itself and act. This work, among the best poetry of our
time, is full of conflict, contradiction and the vitality of
thinking. That is, thinking while feeling while thinking and trying
to sift through it all, and back, finally, to some enduring shelter
in a self-aware language."—HTML Giant
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