Jean Genet Poems Review
Let us be honest: Genet is a better novelist than a poet. Some poems feel like exercises in style, where the metaphor collapses under its own weight. The relentless focus on betrayal and bodily fluids can become exhausting—a monochrome canvas of grime. Furthermore, the translation problem is severe. Genet’s French relies on archaic criminal slang ( argot ) that sounds tinny or ridiculous when rendered into flat American English. A line that sings in Paris can fall flat in Peoria.
Who should read Jean Genet’s poems? Not the person looking for comfort or pretty images. These poems are for those who believe that beauty is not the opposite of rot, but its most intimate neighbor. They are for readers who understand that a poem about a hanged man can be as tender as a lullaby. jean genet poems
The most accessible entry point is the volume The Criminal Child & Other Writings , which includes a selection of his early poems. What you will discover is a young Genet—still in prison, still without a publisher—teaching himself how to turn degradation into a diamond. Let us be honest: Genet is a better novelist than a poet