This collection of humorous and satiric verse takes its title from that thoroughly southern term meaning "irreverent retort," "ironic remark," or "scoffing observation." The ancient Roman poet Juvenal noted that his world made it hard not to write satire. Fred Chappell, finding his contemporary era analogous to that of imperial Rome, has in Backsass given in to the impulse for invective and mockery. Whether addressing the political, the poetical, or the practical, Chappell brandishes his lexical sword, ribbing our shortcomings, offering tonic advice, and occasionally shedding a tear for our fallen ideals. Some poetry is fine wine. Backsass is the driest of martinis.
Chappell's lively verse at its best. It questions, pokes fun, satirizes, illuminates, and provides revelations at every turn. It does what poetry should be doing in a jaded, absurd time.
A Little Jest and Much Truth
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Any new book by Fred Chappell is cause for celebration. In my estimation he is, word for word, page for page, the best living writer we have no in the United States.BACKSASS finds him in particularly fine form. It is a collection of poems following the satirical mode of Roman master Juvenal in which the poet gives vent to his spleen on any number of issues, including politics, poetry, and gross materialism. My own favorite among the group is his long poem on the state of contemporary intellectual life, in which he socks it to poetasters and grant-givers and LitCrits who have done so much to cripple American intellectual life with their ideologies and their peculiar theories and their determination to elevate the mediocre over the excellent (what little bit of excellence is left). (Chappell, who has never won a Pulitzer Prize or been nominated for the Nobel, may be writing out of some personal frustration here, but it is wholly justified. He never tells anything less than the truth.) His Thanksgiving poem, of near equal length, is just downright lovely. In it we see an appreciation of those things which really matter in life - friends, good food, good conversation, etc.Although Chappell is clearly bitter in places, he is never dour or dull. And his observations, in both free verse and rhymed, are must reading for optimists and pessimist alike.
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