Reviews

The Flame by Leonard Cohen

slad's review against another edition

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reflective sad slow-paced

faganthedragon's review against another edition

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reflective fast-paced

4.0

askmashka's review against another edition

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emotional informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

emadisonc's review against another edition

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dark emotional inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

4.0

fateandkarma's review against another edition

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emotional reflective medium-paced

gofftree's review against another edition

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emotional reflective relaxing slow-paced

3.0

cwalsh's review against another edition

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5.0

Biased? Maybe, but this collection is a beautiful compilation that shows Cohen’s many talents in a different light.

micadat's review against another edition

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5.0

I am a fan of many of Leonard’s songs. I really enjoyed the poem where he speaks to his Roshi who had gone through a sex scandal. I really enjoyed one where he says “I need to be weightless, but I never am”. And the homage to Morente, a gypsy singer who sang Leonard’s Halleluya better than the original in a way that made him feel “humbled but not humiliated”.

Reading Leonard Cohen, I can say I felt “humbled but not humiliated”. This respect for the office of the poet, of the singer, of a profound and religious sort. This respect for the office he belonged to, his own humility in regards to his profession makes it easier to be humble myself.

That these poems, rhyming sometimes easily, in what often seem like simple schemes, could be the work of a lifetime, a master workmanship that deserves great admiration is I guess shocking. And perhaps most shocking of all that the master worksman should sometimes say “I am [just] a whore/ and a junkie” and that critics are right, his work is “cheap, superficial, pretentious, insignificant”. I choose to read this much as Bodhidharma's words in front of a Chinese monarch, when he says he doesn’t who he is, and that the greatest teaching of the dharma is “Vast emptiness and nothing holy”. That poetry or art could be in simple things, that artfulness is not in sheer complexity or in labour, but in a “beauty” in some sense magical or spiritual.

“Humbled but not humiliated” how much do just these words say?

stonedbutch's review against another edition

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reflective medium-paced

3.75

thegoodscorpio's review against another edition

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dark emotional hopeful inspiring mysterious sad tense fast-paced

5.0

Rip king