"This was a real treat, walking so lightly along the line where the sacred and the profane meet with intelligence, imagination, and lots of charm. I kept being reminded of Ecclesiastes." --Alicia Ostriker, author of Once More Out of Darkness and Other Poems "I'm familiar with many of the things Constam's poems plangently evoke. Some of the poems remind me, in the best way, of poems by Yehuda Amichai and Nelly Sachs. From time to time, I also was reminded of some of the later poems of R. S. Thomas." --Kevin John Hart, Anglo-Australian theologian, philosopher, and poet "I just love these poems! They are such a wonderful deep dive that pulls me into each experience so evocatively.
Overall, what comes through is the wrestling--wrestling with God, with being faithful or not, with being secular yet pulled/tied/anchored to this tradition. It resonated with my understanding of the biblical meaning of 'Israel' as 'he who wrestles with God.'" --Leonard Freeman, author of Ashes and the Phoenix "I enjoyed most the combination of a hard, no-nonsense style . with restrained lyrical and philosophical flights, passages of insight that are fully poetic and dramatized." --A. F. Moritz, University of Toronto "In Brought Down , Constam appears as . a Seinfeld-mode Job, questioning God about his 'masquerading as the dark.
' God is 'arbitrary' and we are fickle; or he is fickle and our intermittent obedience to indecipherably contradictory dicta becomes the real story of each obituary. I thank Simon 'Agonistes' Constam . for giving us a newfangled Ecclesiastes. Brought Down delivers the goods!" --George Elliott Clarke, Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate, 2016-17 "There is a great deal of self-knowledge in these poems, and it is all slightly painful, a bit absurd, and touched with a humble grandiosity that the poet relishes. He is irrecoverably entangled in Jewishness, and he brings that into the light. For all the suffering and painful contradictions the poems in this book deal with against the historical background of Jewish suffering, the mind that comes through is invariably gentle." --Stanley Fefferman, Atkinson College, York University, retired.