The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands: Poems

Author:   Professor of Creative Writing Nick Flynn
Publisher:   Graywolf Press
ISBN:  

9781555975746


Pages:   80
Publication Date:   01 February 2011
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands: Poems


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Overview

"New poetry by the acclaimed writer Nick Flynn, author of Another Bullshit Night in Suck City and The Ticking Is the Bomb electrocution, no--the boy stood in the hot-hot room stammering I did stammering I did stammering I did stammering I did stammering everything you say I did I did. --from ""Fire"" The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands is Nick Flynn's first new poetry collection in nearly a decade. What begins as a meditation on love and the body soon breaks down into a collage of voices culled from media reports, childhood memories, testimonies from Abu Ghraib detainees, passages from documentary films, overheard conversations, and scraps of poems and song, only to reassemble with a gathering sonic force. It's as if all the noise that fills our days were a storm, yet at the center is a quiet place, but to get there you must first pass through the storm, with eyes wide open, singing. Each poem becomes a hallucinatory, shifting experience, through jump cut, lyric persuasion, and deadpan utterance. This is an emotional, resilient response to some of the essential issues of our day by one of America's riskiest and most innovative writers."

Full Product Details

Author:   Professor of Creative Writing Nick Flynn
Publisher:   Graywolf Press
Imprint:   Graywolf Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.30cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.10cm
Weight:   0.299kg
ISBN:  

9781555975746


ISBN 10:   1555975747
Pages:   80
Publication Date:   01 February 2011
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

With The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn has written a rare lyrical interrogation of brutality in the light of conscience, an unsparing temoignage that sings back to redacted documents, to memoranda governing torture protocols, to night & prison & desert & darkness. This is a poetry that should be read out before the Permanent Court of International Justice in The Hague. Read and be filled with awe, sorrow and gratitude for this poet's gifts and spiritual courage. --Carolyn Forche Once again, the unstoppable Nick Flynn has flung open a door we didn't know existed. Threaded with dark humor and kickass tweaks to the predictable, The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands is a biting and sparse revelation, a lyrical narrative that unfurls to reveal truths that are insistent and vaguely unsettling. '...isn't it time to admit, ' Flynn asks, 'we are more machinery than gods / that our house is more maze than temple?' Yes, it's time-and Flynn's deft, blade-edged poetics shove us toward many such insights, with a signature he has defined as solely his own. --Patricia Smith Nick Flynn has written-in the tradition of poets such as Yeats, Whitman, Neruda, Bly, and Ginsberg-a book of political lyric poetry. The book contains, as well, fragile self-transcendence, unself-conscious witness, and the unnoticed heroism of having done or said something against a world as welcoming and congenial to evil as ours appears to be right now. --Franz Wright I've been waiting for this book for several years now. In fact, I've often argued the need for writers to pick up the pen with this subject in mind. Still-how much easier it is to look away. To not face our own complicity. Our own culpable part within the larger historical whole. Thankfully, in The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn chooses not to turn away. Instead, he brings us a poetry which serves as a witness to torture. It is a necessary investigation into our shared humanity and into the depravations which undermine it. And while it's true that to enter this book is to enter into an intimate world of institutionalized pain, the Reader will also discover in these pages that the first thing we should do / if we see each other again is to make / a cage of our bodies-inside we can place / whatever still shines. --Brian Turner, author of Here, Bullet This book is a serious one. It's asking difficult questions instead of dancing a post-postmodern dance. It dialogues with suffering and with Paul Celan's 'Deathfugue.' It's an important book. --Adam Zagajewski With The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn has written a rare lyrical interrogation of brutality in the light of conscience, an unsparing temoignage that sings back to redacted documents, to memoranda governing torture protocols, to night & prison & desert & darkness. This is a poetry that should be read out before the Permanent Court of International Justice in The Hague. Read and be filled with awe, sorrow and gratitude for this poet's gifts and spiritual courage. Carolyn Forche Once again, the unstoppable Nick Flynn has flung open a door we didn't know existed. Threaded with dark humor and kickass tweaks to the predictable, The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands is a biting and sparse revelation, a lyrical narrative that unfurls to reveal truths that are insistent and vaguely unsettling. '...isn't it time to admit, ' Flynn asks, 'we are more machinery than gods / that our house is more maze than temple?' Yes, it's time-and Flynn's deft, blade-edged poetics shove us toward many such insights, with a signature he has defined as solely his own. Patricia Smith Nick Flynn has written-in the tradition of poets such as Yeats, Whitman, Neruda, Bly, and Ginsberg-a book of political lyric poetry. The book contains, as well, fragile self-transcendence, unself-conscious witness, and the unnoticed heroism of having done or said something against a world as welcoming and congenial to evil as ours appears to be right now. Franz Wright I've been waiting for this book for several years now. In fact, I've often argued the need for writers to pick up the pen with this subject in mind. Still-how much easier it is to look away. To not face our own complicity. Our own culpable part within the larger historical whole. Thankfully, in The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn chooses not to turn away. Instead, he brings us a poetry which serves as a witness to torture. It is a necessary investigation into our shared humanity and into the depravations which undermine it. And while it's true that to enter this book is to enter into an intimate world of institutionalized pain, the Reader will also discover in these pages that the first thing we should do / if we see each other again is to make / a cage of our bodies-inside we can place / whatever still shines. Brian Turner, author of Here, Bullet This book is a serious one. It's asking difficult questions instead of dancing a post-postmodern dance. It dialogues with suffering and with Paul Celan's 'Deathfugue.' It's an important book. Adam Zagajewski


With The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn has written a rare lyrical interrogation of brutality in the light of conscience, an unsparing temoignage that sings back to redacted documents, to memoranda governing torture protocols, to night & prison & desert & darkness. This is a poetry that should be read out before the Permanent Court of International Justice in The Hague. Read and be filled with awe, sorrow and gratitude for this poet's gifts and spiritual courage. Carolyn Forche Once again, the unstoppable Nick Flynn has flung open a door we didn't know existed. Threaded with dark humor and kickass tweaks to the predictable, The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands is a biting and sparse revelation, a lyrical narrative that unfurls to reveal truths that are insistent and vaguely unsettling. '...isn't it time to admit, ' Flynn asks, 'we are more machinery than gods / that our house is more maze than temple?' Yes, it's time-and Flynn's deft, blade-edged poetics shove us toward many such insights, with a signature he has defined as solely his own. Patricia Smith Nick Flynn has written-in the tradition of poets such as Yeats, Whitman, Neruda, Bly, and Ginsberg-a book of political lyric poetry. The book contains, as well, fragile self-transcendence, unself-conscious witness, and the unnoticed heroism of having done or said something against a world as welcoming and congenial to evil as ours appears to be right now. Franz Wright I've been waiting for this book for several years now. In fact, I've often argued the need for writers to pick up the pen with this subject in mind. Still-how much easier it is to look away. To not face our own complicity. Our own culpable part within the larger historical whole. Thankfully, in The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn chooses not to turn away. Instead, he brings us a poetry which serves as a witness to torture. It is a necessary investigation into our shared humanity and into the depravations which undermine it. And while it's true that to enter this book is to enter into an intimate world of institutionalized pain, the Reader will also discover in these pages that the first thing we should do / if we see each other again is to make / a cage of our bodies-inside we can place / whatever still shines. Brian Turner, author of Here, Bullet This book is a serious one. It's asking difficult questions instead of dancing a post-postmodern dance. It dialogues with suffering and with Paul Celan's 'Deathfugue.' It's an important book. Adam Zagajewski With The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn has written a rare lyrical interrogation of brutality in the light of conscience, an unsparing temoignage that sings back to redacted documents, to memoranda governing torture protocols, to night & prison & desert & darkness. This is a poetry that should be read out before the Permanent Court of International Justice in The Hague. Read and be filled with awe, sorrow and gratitude for this poet's gifts and spiritual courage. --Carolyn Forche Once again, the unstoppable Nick Flynn has flung open a door we didn't know existed. Threaded with dark humor and kickass tweaks to the predictable, The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands is a biting and sparse revelation, a lyrical narrative that unfurls to reveal truths that are insistent and vaguely unsettling. '...isn't it time to admit, ' Flynn asks, 'we are more machinery than gods / that our house is more maze than temple?' Yes, it's time-and Flynn's deft, blade-edged poetics shove us toward many such insights, with a signature he has defined as solely his own. --Patricia Smith Nick Flynn has written-in the tradition of poets such as Yeats, Whitman, Neruda, Bly, and Ginsberg-a book of political lyric poetry. The book contains, as well, fragile self-transcendence, unself-conscious witness, and the unnoticed heroism of having done or said something against a world as welcoming and congenial to evil as ours appears to be right now. --Franz Wright I've been waiting for this book for several years now. In fact, I've often argued the need for writers to pick up the pen with this subject in mind. Still-how much easier it is to look away. To not face our own complicity. Our own culpable part within the larger historical whole. Thankfully, in The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn chooses not to turn away. Instead, he brings us a poetry which serves as a witness to torture. It is a necessary investigation into our shared humanity and into the depravations which undermine it. And while it's true that to enter this book is to enter into an intimate world of institutionalized pain, the Reader will also discover in these pages that the first thing we should do / if we see each other again is to make / a cage of our bodies-inside we can place / whatever still shines. --Brian Turner, author of Here, Bullet This book is a serious one. It's asking difficult questions instead of dancing a post-postmodern dance. It dialogues with suffering and with Paul Celan's 'Deathfugue.' It's an important book. --Adam Zagajewski


With The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn has written a rare lyrical interrogation of brutality in the light of conscience, an unsparing temoignage that sings back to redacted documents, to memoranda governing torture protocols, to night & prison & desert & darkness. This is a poetry that should be read out before the Permanent Court of International Justice in The Hague. Read and be filled with awe, sorrow and gratitude for this poet's gifts and spiritual courage. --Carolyn Forche Once again, the unstoppable Nick Flynn has flung open a door we didn't know existed. Threaded with dark humor and kickass tweaks to the predictable, The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands is a biting and sparse revelation, a lyrical narrative that unfurls to reveal truths that are insistent and vaguely unsettling. '...isn't it time to admit, ' Flynn asks, 'we are more machinery than gods / that our house is more maze than temple?' Yes, it's time-and Flynn's deft, blade-edged poetics shove us toward many such insights, with a signature he has defined as solely his own. --Patricia Smith Nick Flynn has written-in the tradition of poets such as Yeats, Whitman, Neruda, Bly, and Ginsberg-a book of political lyric poetry. The book contains, as well, fragile self-transcendence, unself-conscious witness, and the unnoticed heroism of having done or said something against a world as welcoming and congenial to evil as ours appears to be right now. --Franz Wright I've been waiting for this book for several years now. In fact, I've often argued the need for writers to pick up the pen with this subject in mind. Still-how much easier it is to look away. To not face our own complicity. Our own culpable part within the larger historical whole. Thankfully, in The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn chooses not to turn away. Instead, he brings us a poetry which serves as a witness to torture. It is a necessary investigation into our shared humanity and into the depravations which undermine it. And while it's true that to enter this book is to enter into an intimate world of institutionalized pain, the Reader will also discover in these pages that the first thing we should do / if we see each other again is to make / a cage of our bodies-inside we can place / whatever still shines. --Brian Turner, author of Here, Bullet This book is a serious one. It's asking difficult questions instead of dancing a post-postmodern dance. It dialogues with suffering and with Paul Celan's 'Deathfugue.' It's an important book. --Adam Zagajewski With The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn has written a rare lyrical interrogation of brutality in the light of conscience, an unsparing temoignage that sings back to redacted documents, to memoranda governing torture protocols, to night & prison & desert & darkness. This is a poetry that should be read out before the Permanent Court of International Justice in The Hague. Read and be filled with awe, sorrow and gratitude for this poet's gifts and spiritual courage. Carolyn Forche Once again, the unstoppable Nick Flynn has flung open a door we didn't know existed. Threaded with dark humor and kickass tweaks to the predictable, The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands is a biting and sparse revelation, a lyrical narrative that unfurls to reveal truths that are insistent and vaguely unsettling. '...isn't it time to admit, ' Flynn asks, 'we are more machinery than gods / that our house is more maze than temple?' Yes, it's time-and Flynn's deft, blade-edged poetics shove us toward many such insights, with a signature he has defined as solely his own. Patricia Smith Nick Flynn has written-in the tradition of poets such as Yeats, Whitman, Neruda, Bly, and Ginsberg-a book of political lyric poetry. The book contains, as well, fragile self-transcendence, unself-conscious witness, and the unnoticed heroism of having done or said something against a world as welcoming and congenial to evil as ours appears to be right now. Franz Wright I've been waiting for this book for several years now. In fact, I've often argued the need for writers to pick up the pen with this subject in mind. Still-how much easier it is to look away. To not face our own complicity. Our own culpable part within the larger historical whole. Thankfully, in The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands, Nick Flynn chooses not to turn away. Instead, he brings us a poetry which serves as a witness to torture. It is a necessary investigation into our shared humanity and into the depravations which undermine it. And while it's true that to enter this book is to enter into an intimate world of institutionalized pain, the Reader will also discover in these pages that the first thing we should do / if we see each other again is to make / a cage of our bodies-inside we can place / whatever still shines. Brian Turner, author of Here, Bullet This book is a serious one. It's asking difficult questions instead of dancing a post-postmodern dance. It dialogues with suffering and with Paul Celan's 'Deathfugue.' It's an important book. Adam Zagajewski


Author Information

NICK FLYNN is the author of two memoirs, The Ticking Is the Bomb and Another Bullshit Night in Suck City. He is also the author of two previous poetry collections, Blind Huber and Some Ether. He teaches at the University of Houston and lives in New York.

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