
The Flame
“Cohen’s final volume shows his poetic soul. If you know the man only because of Hallelujah or Suzanne, pick up The Flame and warm yourself within its pages.”
Washington Post
New York Times bestseller
A London Daily Mail Best Book of the Year
A Financial Times Best Book of the Year
An O O Magazine Pick for Fall
A Time Magazine Pick for Fall
A 2019 Audie Award Finalist for Best Narration in Short Stories/Collections
An Esquire pick for Fall
A Vanity Fair Magazine Pick for Fall
A Vogue Best Book of Autumn
Among longlisted titles for Oprah.com Best Books of the Year, 2018
Among longlisted titles for Financial Times Books of the Year, 2018
Among longlisted titles for San Francisco Chronicle Best Book of the Year, 2018
This program is read by Margaret Atwood, Rodney Crowell, John Doe, Jim Fletcher, Ari Fliakos, Maggie Hoffman, Ross Marquand, Will Patton, Seth Rogen, Michael Shannon, and Neela Vaswani. The Flame is the final collection of the seminal musician and poet, which he was determined to complete before his death. Just weeks before his death in late 2016, Leonard Cohen told The New Yorker that he was ready for the end to come. He just wanted enough time to put his last book in order. Fortunately, that time was granted. The Flame is Cohen’s eloquent farewell, a valedictory collection of lyrics and poems that maps his singular creative journey. As noted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s citation, “For six decades, Leonard Cohen revealed his soul to the world through poetry and song—his deep and timeless humanity touching our very core.” In addition to new poems about war, desire, regrets, lamb chops, and hummingbirds, and lyrics from his last three albums, including the chart-topping “You Want It Darker,” The Flame includes carefully selected excerpts from Cohen’s voluminous notebooks, which he kept faithfully over the years. Listeners will hear about the subjects that have always preoccupied Cohen: the dimensions of love, the secret code of existence, and the hope for transcendence in a broken world. In the words of Cohen’s longtime manager and friend, Robert Kory, The Flame “reveals to all the intensity of his inner fire” to the end.
Praise
