The American Poetry Review

OH, CORONA

Books

The Lights

by Ben Lerner

Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2023

128 pp., $26.00 (hardcover)

According to the latest Times article on the qualitative merits of bot art, Ben Lerner has lent excerpts from his new poetry collection to a group of venture capitalists. Apparently, they needed help prompting their AI. This makes a certain amount of sense. What better test for such a machine than the unimaginable? Something abstractly concrete, definite action terminating in a dream. Non sequiturs abound in The Lights, though, being the airy, cerebral kind, you don’t scratch your head so much as shrug, or laugh:

Now a purpose for the arts comes into focus, leaving a bright halo around the body. The way psychoanalysis lacks an account of nut milks. How the term “labor” plays about the lips of humanists. I develop predictive technologies for complex scenarios. I slow down popular songs and play them over footage of sunflowers tracking east.

That is, unless what does not follow is the least shred of context. Plenty occurs to Lerner and, like a caffeinated teenager, he can’t resist telling you—“I’m studying implicit race bias in toddlers. I’m tracking the advent

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The American Poetry Review

The American Poetry Review3 min read
from SCENES FROM LATIN POETRY
Qui tacet consentire videtur. Silence gives consent.Veritas odium parit. Truth creates hatred. You know how you can know some thingsbut forget you know until it’s time to remember.Mom met her third husband Billy whenshe was a teacher helping convicts
The American Poetry Review2 min read
Six Poems
a golden shovel after Richard Wright To realize a girl blossoming is to figure purpleas disquiet. A flower forgotten (even an artichoke)if only to safekeep. In time, the daughter becomes agranddaughter budding in the darkof the mind’s cupboard. a gol
The American Poetry Review2 min read
Four Poems
In the middleof spring, in the centerof the thicketa family of finches are making a slogof dinner, wormsthat, pulled outof the ground become somethinglike an elegiacwitness to hunger,the birds’ hunger, the thicket’s starvation,the yellowed grass’sthi

Related Books & Audiobooks