Losses of Life is comprised of two long poems:
The first, Child of Man, derived from Emerson's journals, letters, and essays, is an elegy for the death of Emerson's son Waldo.
The second, Stations, is a sequence of poems exploring losses of a different sort.
Eric Hoffman's "sharp-eyed and agile" poems are "teeming with surprise"
(Patrick Pritchett)
and
"deserve to be better and more widely-known" (Eileen Tabios).
"The quality of the verse... is undeniable; there are great pleasures to be had in Hoffman's lines" (Jason Ranek).
His poetry manifests a "restless and manifold creativity, a creativity Emerson himself would have saluted" (Anthony Rudolf).
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