How Chet Baker Died: Poems
Poems from the acclaimed author of Roy’s World, Wild at Heart, and many other works


The first words in Barry Gifford’s new poetry collection say it all—“Here I am wasting time again / writing poems to keep myself company” — doing what he has ever done, surprising his readers in kaleidoscopic prisms of color, turning every breath into a story, and himself into his most colorful character.

She stood and walked across the lawn past the cottage and into the big house.
He stayed to watch the last of the sunset,
waiting for the flash of green.
When it was finally dark and there was no moon and the fireflies appeared,
he got up and began walking toward the house.
He loved the Italian word for firefly,
lucciola. She was like that, flickering on and off from moment to moment.
As he approached the house, he could hear her singing: Vogliatemi bene, un bene
piccolino. It’s so strange, he thought,
life’s so fast and time’s too slow.
He stopped and watched the fireflies.

Or this:

In my dream someone asked me if
I remembered Frank Jackson
Hearing this name brought tears to my eyes though I’ve never known anyone by that name

The mystery in these poems lives just beyond the province of words. In a strange way, Barry Gifford’s poems tell a wordless story, freed of the writer’s art. “It’s dangerous to remember / so much, especially for a writer / The temptation to make sense / of it is always there / where you and I / are no longer.” Daily life, family and friends, are much more important here than books. The beauty and elusiveness of women and music are of utmost importance, far more so than literature. As he attests: “I prefer music to poems, words don’t live the same way—so, listen.”
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How Chet Baker Died: Poems
Poems from the acclaimed author of Roy’s World, Wild at Heart, and many other works


The first words in Barry Gifford’s new poetry collection say it all—“Here I am wasting time again / writing poems to keep myself company” — doing what he has ever done, surprising his readers in kaleidoscopic prisms of color, turning every breath into a story, and himself into his most colorful character.

She stood and walked across the lawn past the cottage and into the big house.
He stayed to watch the last of the sunset,
waiting for the flash of green.
When it was finally dark and there was no moon and the fireflies appeared,
he got up and began walking toward the house.
He loved the Italian word for firefly,
lucciola. She was like that, flickering on and off from moment to moment.
As he approached the house, he could hear her singing: Vogliatemi bene, un bene
piccolino. It’s so strange, he thought,
life’s so fast and time’s too slow.
He stopped and watched the fireflies.

Or this:

In my dream someone asked me if
I remembered Frank Jackson
Hearing this name brought tears to my eyes though I’ve never known anyone by that name

The mystery in these poems lives just beyond the province of words. In a strange way, Barry Gifford’s poems tell a wordless story, freed of the writer’s art. “It’s dangerous to remember / so much, especially for a writer / The temptation to make sense / of it is always there / where you and I / are no longer.” Daily life, family and friends, are much more important here than books. The beauty and elusiveness of women and music are of utmost importance, far more so than literature. As he attests: “I prefer music to poems, words don’t live the same way—so, listen.”
23.95 In Stock
How Chet Baker Died: Poems

How Chet Baker Died: Poems

by Barry Gifford
How Chet Baker Died: Poems

How Chet Baker Died: Poems

by Barry Gifford

Hardcover

$23.95 
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Overview

Poems from the acclaimed author of Roy’s World, Wild at Heart, and many other works


The first words in Barry Gifford’s new poetry collection say it all—“Here I am wasting time again / writing poems to keep myself company” — doing what he has ever done, surprising his readers in kaleidoscopic prisms of color, turning every breath into a story, and himself into his most colorful character.

She stood and walked across the lawn past the cottage and into the big house.
He stayed to watch the last of the sunset,
waiting for the flash of green.
When it was finally dark and there was no moon and the fireflies appeared,
he got up and began walking toward the house.
He loved the Italian word for firefly,
lucciola. She was like that, flickering on and off from moment to moment.
As he approached the house, he could hear her singing: Vogliatemi bene, un bene
piccolino. It’s so strange, he thought,
life’s so fast and time’s too slow.
He stopped and watched the fireflies.

Or this:

In my dream someone asked me if
I remembered Frank Jackson
Hearing this name brought tears to my eyes though I’ve never known anyone by that name

The mystery in these poems lives just beyond the province of words. In a strange way, Barry Gifford’s poems tell a wordless story, freed of the writer’s art. “It’s dangerous to remember / so much, especially for a writer / The temptation to make sense / of it is always there / where you and I / are no longer.” Daily life, family and friends, are much more important here than books. The beauty and elusiveness of women and music are of utmost importance, far more so than literature. As he attests: “I prefer music to poems, words don’t live the same way—so, listen.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781644211540
Publisher: Seven Stories Press
Publication date: 04/12/2022
Pages: 112
Product dimensions: 5.69(w) x 9.27(h) x 0.53(d)

About the Author

About The Author
BARRY GIFFORD is the author of more than forty published works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, which have been translated into thirty languages. He began as a poet, and always returns to that “lyrical but laconic, compassionate but unsentimental” voice. His most recent books include Black Sun Rising/La Corazonada, Roy’s World: Stories 1973–2020, Writers, and Sailor & Lula: The Complete Novels. His most recent poetry collection is Imagining Paradise: New and Selected Poems. Wild at Heart, directed by David Lynch and based on Gifford’s 1990 novel of the same name (one of the eight novels included in Sailor & Lula), from a script co-written by Lynch and Gifford, won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1990, the same year in which Wild at Heart was first published. Gifford and Lynch also cowrote the original screenplay for Lost Highway. Gifford lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Table of Contents

Blood Moon in February 3

New York, 1960 4

The Disappeared 5

Big Words 6

The Unconquered Flame 8

Ciao, Paloma 10

Ode to Jerry 11

Mouth of the River 12

Women and Death 14

The Funeral 15

Last Night's Dream 16

Passing Acquaintance 17

At Apollinaire's Grave, Pére-Lachaise 18

At Ezra Pound's Grave, San Michele 19

Passage on a Slow Freighter 20

For Yosano Akiko, whose heart was like the sun 21

Approaching the Forbidden City 22

Catastrophe at the Grocery Store 23

After Life 25

Remember 26

March 17 27

Dada(III) 28

The Color Red 29

Lost Postcard 30

Frank Jackson 31

The Difference 33

Edith Piaf Regrets Nothing 34

With Dan at the Museum 35

Camera Oscura 36

Cela ne fait rien 37

A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of Natural Things 38

My Books 39

What Bobby D. Taught Me 40

On Time 41

No king in Israel 42

Utah Street 43

Reverdy 44

Bad Blonde 45

New Mexico, 1969 46

Neruda 47

The Cause 48

Thy Own Hand Yields Thy Deaths Instrument, Sez Ez 49

The Chinese Pastoral Society 50

What She Did Have 52

Myth without Text 53

Thanksgiving 2017 54

3-7-77 55

Literature 56

My Dream 57

She Had A Beautiful Voice 58

Rough Mix for Miles Okazaki 59

Finding Favor in the Sight of the King 60

Weekend 61

Montana 62

The Lion Dying Thrusteth Forth His Paw 64

The Arm 65

Le Denouement 67

American Pastime 68

Immortals 69

The Most Dangerous Age 70

Ambush 71

Midnight Makes Its Move 72

Turn Again and Tell the Captain 73

How Chet Baker Died 74

Forward and Back 76

Beyond the Rivers of Ethiopia 77

Special Collections 78

Jim Harrison 79

Great Expectations 80

Colorado 81

Isolation 82

4 A.M. Used to Be Night, Now its Morning 83

A Love Story for Nelson Algren 84

Conchita 85

Homage to Simonides 87

At Giza 88

Bologna 89

Rinchu 90

Mexican Waitress 92

Mexican Haircut 93

History Lesson 94

Swans 96

Sitting in the Sun Reading Chekhov 97

Early October Remembering My Friend Tom Takemitsu 98

When I Am Walking 99

In a Past Life I Was Mistakenly a Poet 100

Index of Poem Titles 101

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