Goldbarth, whose Heaven and Earth: A Cosmology won the 1992 National Book Critics Circle Award, is a poet of prodigious gifts—chief among them dazzling intelligence, a passion for language, and a positively Rabelaisian wit and erudition. This remarkable collection includes 'Different Fleshes,' a book-length 'novel-poem' (first published in 1979) that is set in small-town Texas and Paris; twenty-two poems of widely varying style and length; and 'Dual,' an essay-poem that deals with photographer Diane Arbus and his own 'Daddy Irv,' a paint-by-numbers artist. A unifying theme of sorts here is filial affection: 'Before the slaver-,/ shagend-, hunker- and howl-/ beasts lifted themselves on two feet into/ my fathers, my fathers/ wrote poems.' Highly recommended.