TDR Letter
Subject:
Reply to Comment (very late) on J.M. Smith's review of Dewdney
March 4, 2005
Dear Mr. Baglow,
I regret "lazy." I have no
desire to throw my own supererogatory inner voice around, and so will
gladly pledge to try never to use the word again in a review, even of an
over-rated writer.
Anyway, I have to wonder about your
letter. It’s understandable that you wouldn’t do more than
cherry-pick the review, but it also seems to me that you didn’t read
Dewdney’s book, otherwise you’d have more to say in the way of
praise of it rather than of a Dylan Thomas poem we all know a little too
well.
If you ever do get around to reading
the (Dewdney) poem, I’d be extremely interested to hear what you think
is good about the long passage from which you chose that one
sentence. I wrote that it reads like the prose in a low-grade museum
display, and then I pointed out the qualities that made it seem that way
to me.
The critical issue, it seemed (and
still seems) to me, is precision and power, not grammatical correctness.
It has occurred to me that maybe I
misunderstood the whole poem. Maybe (in its Wilhelm Reich-like views of
orgasm and evolution, for instance) it’s more intentionally
funny and eccentric and slack than I took it be. Perhaps you can
enlighten…
You will to have to do better, though,
than praising its "ruggedness." (I’m guessing you
momentarily confused the poem with the person.)
Speaking of the avenue ad hominem, it’s
good you didn’t go so far as to accuse me of being in any way like a
"physician." Then the gloves would really have come off.
J. Mark Smith
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