House of Blue Light : Poems, Paperback by Kirby, David, ISBN 0807126179, ISBN-13 9780807126172, Like New Used, Free shipping in the US

<p><i>The House of Blue Light</i> is the second collection of autobiographical “memory poems” by Catholic-school-boy-gone-bad-turned-poet-made-good David Kirby, a stand-up comic of verse if ever there was one: “in Stardust Memories . . . these wise space aliens who visit Earth . . . tell [Woody Allen] that if he really wants to serve humanity, / he should tell funnier jokes—wait, that’s my duty, / I think, that’s my public duty! Because sooner or later, / we all turn upside down.”<br><br>Wearing both heart and wit on his sleeve, Kirby con?des in longish narrative poems events he actually or vicariously experienced—as a child, a teen, a young man, and now—as well as some future scenes he imagines. Literary theorists Jacques Derrida and Roland Barthes; Little Richard and Muhammad Ali; Herman Melville, James Dickey, and Henry James; friends, family, personal heroes, and acquaintances, including the Ah Oui Girl of Paris and Tige Watley’s Whoah of Baton Rouge, are all equally alive in Kirby’s poems.<br><br>As Walt Whitman did, Kirby offers a first-person speaker as a proxy for everyone else (“Who, including ourselves, / knows what we know and when we know it?”), achieving a unity and accessible authenticity rare in poetry. A fun house, “a mishmash for sure,” <i>The House of Blue Light</i> is a delightfully entertaining, irreverent, erudite collection of commentary piling upon commentary that brings us “that one element so largely absent / from our quotidian existence, ., surprise.”</p>