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Trying to Catch the Horses

Dan Gerber

Dan Gerber was born and grew up in western Michigan and received his bachelor's degree from Michigan State University in 1962. He has worked as a corporate executive, an automobile dealer, a profe...

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Trying to Catch the Horses
Poems by Dan Gerber

Dan Gerber


Winner of the ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year, Gold Award, 2000

Dan Gerber's Trying to Catch the Horses is his first full- length collection since his highly acclaimed selected poems, A Last Bridge Home, published in 1992. Many of these fifty-eight poems have appeared in the finest literary magazines and anthologies, including Poetry, New Letters, The Ohio Review, and The Best American Poetry 1999, selected by Robert Bly.

Long recognized as a meditative poet with an almost mystical connection to animals and the natural world, Gerber begins this collection with a quote from Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh: "Contemplate seeing your bodily form present before you -- in the trees, the grass and leaves, the river." In the manner of Rilke and Juan Ram"n Jimenez, Gerber's unadorned poems are acts of discovery, inviting us into a place deep within ourselves through a conversation between human consciousness and the consciousness of things. In the title poem "Trying to Catch the Horses," the poet achieves his apparent goal not through will or ambition, but by letting go, to become "a clump of grass they (the horses) must graze," and to reach up and touch "the sky itself as far as it goes." In two of the book's most riveting poems, Gerber focuses his imagination on both our century's World Wars, envisioning a burst of shrapnel as a flight of blackbirds, and questions the entire enterprise of a great battle in the Pacific and how "we never thought / of fish in the sea and how / this was their home though not their war...."

Whether Gerber writes about horses or war, hiking a canyon or encountering a wolf, his backdrop is a profound silence against which these poems become necessary song.


Praise for Trying to Catch the Horses

"Dan Gerber is one of our finest living poets. I’ve loved his powerful, thought- provoking poems for well over two decades, and I find his new collection, Trying to Catch the Horses, even more subtle and engaging than his previous books. There’s a penetrating and sometimes quirky sensibility at work here, handling violence and beauty with equal respect. In an unembellished language that calls our attention to the world and to its beings rather than to its own virtuosity, these poems credit the reader with intelligence and feeling and ring clear against an essential backdrop of silence."
Annie Dillard

"Dan Gerber is an unique poet. More than any of his contemporaries he immediately makes the relatively ordinary a transcendent state. His work is completely untarnished by fad or fashion and I enter it again and again with a sense of wonderment. When our age passes, this work will remain."
Jim Harrison

"Dan Gerber writes about the natural world as well as anybody working today, regardless of genre. Trying to Catch the Horses is a true book of poems that makes us see our world and our lives in a disturbing and wonderful light and we are infinitely the better for it."
James Welch


World rights

88 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", 2001
Paper, $19.95,

0-87013-534-1
978-0-87013-534-7

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