Advice: A Book of Poems by Maxwell Bodenheim

(9 User reviews)   1884
By Anastasia Zhang Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Celebrated
Bodenheim, Maxwell, 1893-1954 Bodenheim, Maxwell, 1893-1954
English
Ever wonder what happens when a sharp-tongued poet decides to give you life advice—but in verse? Maxwell Bodenheim’s *Advice* is like sitting on a park bench with your most cynical, brilliant friend. The whole thing feels like a guy who's seen too much and isn't afraid to tell you the crazy truth. He talks love, heartbreak, city loneliness, and the weird dance between dreams and daily life. But here's the catch: these poems don't preach. Instead, they feel like secrets passed through whispers, full of sarcasm and surprise. You’ll find yourself laughing, then pausing. Half the challenge is figuring out if he's giving advice or just messing with you. There's gritty stuff, soft moments, and lines that will stay stuck in your head for days. If you want poetry that doesn't dress itself up but can knock you sideways, this mysterious little book calls your name.
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The Story

Okay, so Advice: A Book of Poems isn't a novel with chapters and heroes. It's more like a diary from a flapper-era New York skeptic, Maxwell Bodenheim. He writes about small, everyday scenes—drunks on street corners, lonely apartments, couples fighting in diners—but twists them into something bigger. The "plot" unfolds through moments: a man calls himself a fool for love; a rat eulogizes the dead underside of a city; a pretty voice says promises meant to be broken. Each poem feels like a flash of bird flight—brief, sharp, then gone. Think of it as a mixtape of mood swings, full of wit, bitterness, longing, and pure surprise. Bodenheim cuts through the noise and just presents life as flaking paint might: honest, crumbling, and oddly beautiful.

Why You Should Read It

This collection knocked me flat on the charm train. I’ve never read a poet who could be so direct and sneaky at the same time. He calls people out for being fake, turns small objects (like a broken teacup) into ruthless mirrors for human failure, and manages to be vulnerable without whining. The themes caught me off guard: advice isn’t here meant to be sugary comfort. It’s brass-knuckle facts wrapped in vivid pictures. You’ll yawn and trip over a line like: "Love is a sweet, loud fool only the loneliest need seriously." It talks to you like a real person might, if that person were exceptionally alerted and fed up. If you’re sick of poems smelling like roses, this is the weed-thronged garden you want to scavenge.

Final Verdict

Who’s this book for? Definitely writers who love old grit, readers who think *Max Bodenheim sounds like poet of The Great Gatsby’s underworld* – but dare, actually he is. You’ll love it if you adore minimal words sticking you the best curveball. If you hate elaborate decorations and need something that helps make sense of human messy emotions, directly & spiced, buy it. Avoid? Only if joy must always zing with rainbows. Quick warning: it's from the 1920s, so there's old slang and unflinching raw observations about cities surviving Prohibition. But super readers will sink quickly. I say this book echoes like asphalt rain: stuck permanent, beautiful and tough.



🔓 Community Domain

This title is part of the public domain archive. Preserving history for future generations.

David Jackson
1 month ago

The clarity of the concluding remarks is very professional.

Mary Brown
6 months ago

It effectively synthesizes complex ideas into a coherent whole.

John Smith
2 months ago

As a long-time follower of this subject matter, the language used is precise without being overly academic or confusing. I’ll definitely be revisiting some of these chapters again soon.

Sarah Lopez
5 months ago

It took me a while to process the complex ideas here, but the way the author breaks down the core concepts is remarkably clear. I appreciate the effort that went into this curation.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (9 User reviews )

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