“Delicate, deep, and powerful: those adjectives are not enough to describe the absolute beauty emanating from the poems of Richie Hofmann, a Cavafy for our times.” —Édouard Louis, author of Change
“What thrills me most about Richie Hofmann’s new collection is its haunting, dispassionate commitment to thingly beauty. Despite the kinky sex and eventful Greek myths to which they testify, these poems are “hard and classical,” with exteriors as slender, taut, and delicately jointed as suits of armor. What else would satisfy the exacting sensibility of Hofmann’s speaker—with his “love of surfaces” and “beautiful things,” his radiant eye for detail, and his often dissociative relationship to his own body? How better to dramatize the struggle for control pulsing within him? Don’t be fooled by the formal exquisiteness of these poems—there is real blood coursing through them.” —Maggie Millner, author of Couplets
“In Richie Hofmann’s poems, love is considered as a force, as a sort of beautiful violence. Leading us through classical civilizations and visions of the old world, The Bronze Arms excavates the body’s labyrinth, through which desire stalks, restlessly. The urges of sex, love and rapture go on wounding, completing and undoing us. The brilliance of these statuesque poems, in which a precision of line is matched perfectly, astonishingly, with a precision of image and emotion, is in their attention to the feral and the elegant, the brutal and the beautiful at once. Timeless and utterly contemporary, The Bronze Arms brings the obscure gods of desire and time into the light of perfect form.” —Seán Hewitt, author of Open, Heaven