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September 7, 2008
"The Essential Rumi" by Jalal al-Din Rumi (Author), Et Al Coleman Barks (Translator)
Book Description (Amazon.com Editorial Review):
No translator could do greater justice to the gorgeous simplicity of Rumi's poetry than
Coleman Barks has done here. These exquisite renderings of the 13th-century Persian
mystic's words into American free verse capture all the "inner searching, the delicacy,
and simple groundedness" that characterize Rumi's poetry while remaining faithful to the
images, tone, and spiritual message of the originals. Barks's introductions to each of
the 27 sections (described as "playful palimpsests spread over Rumi's imagination," and
"meant to confuse scholars who would divide Rumi's poetry into the accepted categories")
are themselves wonderful achievements of a poetic imagination; searching explanations of
unfamiliar concepts and funny stories provide colorful background and frame the selections
as no dry historical exegesis could.
While Barks's stamp on this collection is clear, it in no way interferes with the poems
themselves; Rumi's voice leaps off these pages with an ecstatic energy that leaves readers
breathless. There are poems of love, rage, sadness, pleading, and longing; passionate
outbursts about the torture of longing for his beloved and the sweet pleasure that comes
from their union; amusing stories of sexual exploits or human weakness; and quiet truths
about the beauty and variety of human emotion. More than anything, Rumi makes plain the
unbridled joy that comes from living life fully, urging us always to put aside our fears
and take the risk to do so. As he says: "The way of love is not / a subtle argument. /
The door there is devastation. / Birds make great sky-circles / of their freedom. / How do
they learn it? / They fall, and falling, / they're given wings." --Uma Kukathas
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