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Codes, Precepts, Biases, and Taboos: Poems, 1973–1993 1st Edition, Kindle Edition

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 7 ratings

The first three books by the author of Into It

Codes, Precepts, Biases, and Taboos brings together the poems from Lawrence Joseph's first three books of poetry: Shouting at No One, Curriculum Vitae, and Before Our Eyes. Now in one volume, the poems from these three books can be seen as the work of one of American poetry's most original and challenging poets.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Joseph reveals his biography and background early, his fiery style and intellect somewhat later, in this reissue of all his earlier poems. The son of a Lebanese immigrant, Joseph attended Catholic schools in Detroit, where his family endured segregation and violence. His debut volume, Detroit of Shouting at No One (1983), spoke up in rough unrhymed lines much like those of the early Philip Levine. Curriculum Vitae (1988) showed a poet more comfortable with his brainpower and more at ease with abrupt transitions, making his way around England (where he lived after college) and, especially, around New York City, where he worked as a lawyer. (Joseph now teaches at St. John's University Law School; he has written a book of nonfiction called Lawyerland.) The Lebanese civil war of the 1980s gave Joseph another powerful subject, suggesting a "God/ who changes tears into bombs." More original but more uneven, Before Our Eyes (1993) incorporated some halting love poems but also made constant use of terms from economics and law: "Is it true, the rumor that the new/ instruments of equity are children, commodified?" By presenting two simultaneous collections (Into It), FSG hopes to jump-start the career of a cult author; while the material here engages, it never fascinates.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Joseph is an attorney as well as a poet, which accounts for the legal tone of the title of his retrospective collection, Codes, Precepts, Biases, and Taboos. Joseph also has a penchant for reasoning, yet these are molten works, and reading through his earlier poems is to journey through his poetic and philosophical development. Beneath the stable crust of memory is a search for identity. Joseph delves into his ancestry by considering his Lebanese and Syrian Catholic grandparents' homelands and history, and their place as Arab emigrants in the U.S. Through reflection on this heritage and the violence of his Detroit childhood, Joseph ponders anger, choice, and fate. Into It, which collects his newest work, reveals a different poetic voice, one that is more abstract and fluid. Here Joseph is less narrative-based and more symbolic, less angry and more disillusioned, less personal and more universal. Many lyrics seem "coded" with essayistic digressions that gracefully intertwine question, observation, and emotion. Being a New Yorker in a 9/11 world has certainly resonated with Joseph, and the melancholy, grief, and hope of so many people coming to grips with large-scale violence is palpable. Many of these poems are deftly painted (perhaps an influence from his painter wife) with feeling as brushstroke, judgment as perspective, language as dimension, metaphor as theme. Janet St. John
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00JTIOYH4
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 1st edition (June 10, 2014)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ June 10, 2014
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2.0 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 194 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 7 ratings

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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2011
    This is a fabulous book of poetry...we have all gotten off course with not actually reading much poetry...this book will bring you back.
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2017
    CODES, PRECEPTS, BIASES, AND TABOOS -- in my opinion, one of the better titles of a book of poetry -- contains the entirety of Lawrence Joseph's first three books of poetry: "Shouting at No One" (1983), "Curriculum Vitae" (1988), and "Before Our Eyes" (1993). He since has published a fourth book of poems -- "Into It" (2005).

    Two themes dominate. One is concern for the desperate of the world, trying to endure violence, poverty, and their status as outsiders. Indeed, as a whole these are the most socially engaged poems that I have encountered in several years. The second theme is Lawrence Joseph. Most of the poems are autobiographical and many are intensely personal.

    Joseph was born in Detroit in 1948. His grandparents were Eastern Catholic immigrants from Lebanon and Syria. His grandfather and then his father operated Joseph's Market, at the corner of John R and Hendrie in Detroit. Joseph had a scuffling lower-middle-class inner-city upbringing, one frequently scorched by violence. The Josephs themselves were outsiders, or, in the words of one of the poems, "sand n****rs". ("Outside the house my practice / is not to respond to remarks / about my nose or the color of my skin.") Lawrence Joseph escaped the inner city through education -- the University of Michigan; Magdalene College, Cambridge; and the University of Michigan Law School. In addition to being an acclaimed poet, Joseph has had a successful career as a practicing lawyer and a law school professor.

    Detroit figures prominently in these poems. So too does family, religion, and the Levant. As a poet from and about Detroit, Joseph brings to mind Philip Levine. To me, Levine is slightly better at evoking the blue collar milieu, but Joseph is broader and deeper. Also more raw and more powerful. Both Levine and Joseph are worth reading.

    I like better the first two books of poetry collected here -- "Shouting at No One" and "Curriculum Vitae". The poems from "Before Our Eyes" tend to be less direct, more abstract, and more challenging (i.e., less comprehensible).

    My favorite poem in the book is an early one: "I Had No More to Say". At 48 lines, it is a little too long to quote here. In its stead, as a representative sample of Joseph's poetry, here are some lines from "Curriculum Vitae", the title poem of Joseph's second book:

    I might have been born in Beirut,
    not Detroit, with my right name.
    Grandpa taught me to love to eat.
    I am not Orthodox, or Sunni,
    Shiite, or Druse. Baptized
    in the one true Church, I too
    was weaned on Saint Augustine.
    * * *
    I collected holy cards, prayed
    to a litany of saints to intercede
    on behalf of my father who slept
    through the sermon at seven o'clock Mass.
    He worked two jobs, believed
    himself a failure. My brother
    believed himself, my sister denied.
    In the fifth grade Sister Victorine,
    astonished, listened to me recite
    from the Book of Jeremiah.
    My voice changed. I wanted women.

    I have titled this review after another of the poems in the book. In it, a criminal defendant has just been sentenced to twenty to thirty years. He moans, "Lord, I can't do that kind of time":

    the judge, looking down, will smile and say,
    "Then do what you can."
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2018
    These poems are intelligent and thoughtful. Mr. Joseph is a true visionary and understands these times so well. I have read the book through cover to cover twice now, and each time gave me new understandings of our culture and times.
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2007
    This retrospective collection of Lawrence Joseph's poetry (which I've read avidly for years) is cause for celebration. Since "Shouting at No One" (which, with Joseph's second book, "Curriculum Vitae", and his third book, "Before Our Eyes", are presented in full in "Codes, Precepts, Biases, and Taboos"), Joseph has written with a pure and driving ambition seldom seen in the casual world of contemporary poetry. His poetry is both intellectually and emotionally challenging and intense. What I like most about "Codes, Precepts, Biases, and Taboos" is how Joseph constantly pushes language both above and below the radars of the aesthetic orthodoxies rampant in American poetry today, into realms of language truly original and new. From the beginning, Joseph builds his own tradition, out of the traditions of poetries as diverse as those of Williams and Brecht, Stevens and Akhmatova, Lowell and Montale, Adrienne Rich and James Schuyler, George Oppen and Paul Celan. If you want to read poetry that is written as if poetry really matters, I can't recommend this book enough.
    5 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • MarkLondonUK
    4.0 out of 5 stars No problem.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 27, 2015
    Good condition.

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