Monday, April 30, 2012

The Day the World Ends by Ethan Coen

The Day the World Ends by Ethan Coen

Date Published: April 3, 2012
ISBN: 978-0307956309
Publisher: Crown Publishing
Pages: 128
Genre: Poetry
Rating: 4 out of 5

Publisher’s Book Summary: From one of the most inventive and celebrated filmmakers of the twentieth century, and co-creator of such classics as Fargo, No Country for Old Men, and True Grit, a collection of poems that offers humor and insight into an artist who has always pushed the boundaries of his craft.

Ethan Coen's screenplays have surprised and delighted international audiences with their hilarious vision and bizarrely profound understanding of human nature. This eccentric genius is revealed again in The Day the World Ends, a remarkable range of poems that are as funny, ribald, provocative, raw, and often touching as the brilliant films that have made the Coen brothers cult legends.

My Thoughts: I used to read poetry pretty regularly but it’s been years since I’ve spent any serious time on poetry. When I received an email offering me the opportunity to review The Day the World Ends by Ethan Coen I said yes almost immediately because the author is one half of the amazing Coen brothers filmmakers. I know very little about either Coen brother other than the movies they’re associated with such as Fargo, The Big Lebowski, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, Raising Arizona and Barton Fink. But that’s all I need to know. Based on these movies, many which are on my list of favorites, I think Ethan Coen (and Joel, too!) has a terrific, quirky sense of humor, understands dark, black humor, is very intelligent and also eccentric, is good at reading and understanding people and has experienced good and bad in life which he draws on for his work. I was very interested to read Ethan’s poems for these reasons and curious what he’d write about in his poems.

I thought The Day the World Ends had many wonderful poems. I’ve read many of the poems more than once and, I admit, I have a few pages of poems left to read because I’ve been enjoying this book so much and not rushing through it. In this book no two poems are alike and differ in almost every possible aspect. The subject matter varies greatly and anything is fair game. There are poems about birth, death, aging, relationships, love, sheep, bugs, regrets, therapy, poetry, cards, the English language and so much more. The length of the poems also varies from a few short lines to several pages. Some of Coen’s poems are sweet or poignant, some are angry or disappointed, a few are elegant and melodic, others very funny and some, such as ‘Limericks’  are written with very colorful language and I found very amusing! I enjoyed not knowing what to expect of the next poem. Several poems made me laugh out loud and several were very thought-provoking.

I highly recommend this book but caution anyone who is offended by cursing and harsh language. Thank you to Jonathan Lazzara at Crown Publishing Group for sending me a copy of this book.

8 comments:

  1. Glad to see you read some poetry during National Poetry Month! I don't think this one is for me (based on Serena's comparison to the humor in this collection to Christopher Moore's in the Fool), but I'm glad you enjoyed it.

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  3. Yeah this one had its moments, some insightful, some laugh-out-loud funny and some really rude. A little goes a long way with the rude ones, so I had to read them in doses, but the man is quite creative!

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  4. I won a copy of this but passed it on to my 24 year old son - I thought it might be more his speed.

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  5. I have a tough time with poetry for some reason. Perhaps, I'll take a peek at this one though.

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  6. Sandy just shared this one with me, and I am excited to read through it. It sounds like my kind of poetry. A little rough and rude, but brilliant nonetheless! Great review!

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  7. I looked through this one before I passed it on to Kathy (who passed it on to her son). I thought some of them were quite crude, but the one that had me the most interested was the one about skipping your 40's. Since I just entered my 40's it made me a bit nervous ;)

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  8. This one seems to get good reviews across the board. I look forward to reading this quirky collection.

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