Praise for What I Got For a Dollar

Flawless in its versification, deeply impressive, and perpetually pleasure-giving. I have to say, there isn’t a poem in this book that I can resist, and I know the reader will share my pleasure.
— David Ferry, National Book Award-winning author of Bewilderment
Writing in the ninth decade of his life, Stern’s extended meditation on mortality is luminous and lucid, deeply felt … Over and over I found myself startled and moved by discoveries that the poems enact, by their beauty and depth. This is one of the most rewarding books I’ve read in a long, long time.
— Chase Twitchell, author of Horses Where the Answers Should Have Been
On every page of this book, Bert Stern sounds the tragic-comic note of a master. And from this double plane of regard, his poems are as aglitter with gaiety as they are alive to the tears of things.
— George Kalogeris, author of Dialogos: Paired Poems in Translation
Bert Stern’s poems are rare vessels of encounter, necessity, and vacancy, splendid visions of a blessed world where life is both given and taken away. Stern finds life and immediacy in birds and leaves, mountains, rivers and mist, and he makes himself available to these objects to the degree where he can say, I am so naked that I have no skin. These are the poems of an aged man who is widely engaged in his world and all it imparts.
— Richard Fein, author of I Think of Our Lives: New and Selected Poems

About the Author

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Co-founder of Off the Grid Press, Bert Stern is the author of two previous poetry collections, Silk/The Ragpicker’s Grandson and Steerage, as well as the critical book Wallace Stevens: Art of Uncertainty, and Winter in China, a monograph on American expatriate Robert Winter. He is Milligan Professor of English Emeritus at Wabash College, and has also taught at the University of Thessaloniki as Fulbright Professor of English and at Peking University. Stern served as chief editor for Hilton Publishing, and for fifteen years taught for Changing Lives through Literature, a program designed for men and women on probation. He lives in Somerville, Massachusetts.

 
 
What I Got For a Dollar
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