
Philip Schultz won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry with a book called Failure. Comforts of the Abyss presents Schultz’s method of persona writing. I would call it memoir but apparently that’s an out-mode term. Here’s Schultz writing about the books that most affected him as a kid:
“…I’d go around pretending I was Jack Barnes In The Sun Also Rises and Holden Caulfield in The Catcher in the Rye, and even old Huck Finn in Adventurers of Huckleberry Finn. Their opinions and attitudes became mine and I would even try to talk and act the way I imagined they did. Which wasn’t an easy feat for a dyslexic.” (p. 1)
Schultz struggled in school because of his undiagnosed dyslexia. He thought he was dumb. Finally Schultz was diagnosed with dyslexia. He didn’t learn to read until he was 11…but he made up for lost time fast.
Much of Comforts of the Abyss chronicles Schultz’s interactions with famous writers: Philip Roth, Norman Mailer, Elizabeth Bishop, Joan Didon, etc. Those sections are buffered by the poems and poets that affected Schultz’s career as a teacher at Kalamazoo College. Schultz’s favorite contemporary poet is Elizabeth Bishop so he devotes multiple sections of this book to analyzing her work.
If you’d like to see how a poet lives his life, both ups and downs, what famous people he meets, what books and poems most affect him, Comforts of the Abyss reveals much of what made Philip Schultz a good poet. Do you read much poetry? GRADE: B
Table of Contents:
The Mind’s First Freedom 1
The Shitbird, Named and Unnamed 6
I Never Wanted to Be Me, I Don’t Think 13
Pity and Fear 23
My Two Libraries 32
The Poet and the Fiction Writer; Conduits of Revelation 48
Our Most Curious Artifact 62
Somebody Loves Us All 75
Penurious Arrogance 86
A Magic Act 98
Indian Wrestling 107
Which Side Are You On? 119
Voices Veiled and Unveiled 132
The Socratic Method 144
In the Nature of a Test 151
The Map of the World 160
Gussie 168
I Came, I Saw, I Suffered 176
In the Manner of Poetry 184
A New City of Words 193
Anger and Shame 202
The Argument and the Lullaby 211
What We Want 220
Acknowledgments 223
Credits 227








