From the Belly

$28.00

By Karren Alenier

“Don’t go into the Steinian woods alone,” says Karren Alenier. Thus, she enlisted 36 other poets to respond to Gertrude Stein’s Tender Buttons Objects, the first volume of a three-book set. From the Belly: Poets Respond to Gertrude Stein’s Tender Buttons Volume I is a far-flung community of poets, ranging in experience and in age from 19 to 90, who respond with experiments, interpretations, and imaginative echoes of Stein’s willful and whimsical disruptions. Space is provided where the reader may join the conversation with their own responses, making this volume a springboard to new work. Alenier, whose New York Times reviewed opera Gertrude Stein Invents a Jump Early On examined Stein’s critics, leads the response with some of her own Stein-influenced poems. From the Belly offers a way to relax and enjoy Tender Buttons, Gertrude Stein’s most mysterious work.

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About Karren LaLonde Alenier

Karren LaLonde Alenier is author of eight poetry collections—most recently how we hold on from Broadstone Books, 2021. Gertrude Stein Invents a Jump Early On, her jazz opera with composer Bill Banfield, premiered in New York by Encompass New Opera Theatre in 2005.

Praise for From the Belly

This collection of responses to Gertrude Stein is astonishing, yes—but it is also useful. Karren Alenier, one of our most intrepid and experienced Steinists, organizes for us a juxtaposition of an original Tender Button poem and a contemporary poetic reply, echo, return, or reciprocation. There is so much echoing already in Stein; this brilliant anthological conception furthers the resonance. The new poems answer, elaborate, poetically interpret. The famous “sudden spoon” of Stein’s “Malachite” becomes, for instance, an opportunity for your body to be “a spoon that remembers the carrying” such that you can finally hear “a tiny wail from the next room.” Now enter that other room. Stein will be there too, awaiting you.
Al Filreis, author of 1960: When Art and Literature Confronted the Memory of World War II and Remade the Modern

Every turn of the page in the anthology From the Belly is a surprise and a revelation. What I initially thought of as a daunting undertaking—it’s Gertrude Stein, for goodness’ sake!—proved itself to be an exercise in imaginative craft and a demonstration of profound admiration. Part dialogue, part call-and-response, experimentation-prone, the collection captures Tender Buttons’ linguistic acrobatics, lyrical mystery, boundless playfulness, its sing-song, word-whirl, and top-spin.
Joseph O. Legaspi, author of Threshold

This cleverly conceived collection of poems written in response to Tender Buttons achieves what Gertrude Stein herself was always striving for: moments of dialogue on the page, forged in the immediacy of reading. Each one of the poets featured here understands that the glorious openness of Stein’s writing can be responded to in multiple poetic ways. Not only does this book teach us how to read Tender Buttons closely, it also serves as a delightful and illuminating introduction to a selection of fine contemporary poets.
Barbara Will, author of Gertrude Stein, Modernism, and the Problem of Genius and Unlikely Collaboration: Gertrude Stein, Bernard Faÿ and the Vichy Dilemma

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