Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

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  • - Selected Poems 1962-1975
    av Rolf Dieter Brinkmann
    248,-

  • av Kylan Rice
    228,-

    An Image Not a Book is an attempt to register "the strain / of assembly," the difficulty of gathering, garlanding, and holding-together while grieving lost companionship. Instead of raging after order, these poems adapt themselves to looser, more tenuous forms of interwovenness. Improvising restless structures that come together, fall apart, then recombine again, An Image Not a Book is an account of relearning how to dwell in this world (the only world there is) in the aftermath of a catastrophe.What People Are Saying¿¿¿After great pain, as we've been taught, a formal feeling comes. What is remarkable about Kylan Rice's debut is the sheer stateliness of its cadences, the sober pressure and release of its allegiances. Its allegiances are as much with the heart as with the natural world: of snows and garlandings, of the beach at Nags Head and "ponds / in thickened fields." Rice knows that "looking in" is not quite the same thing as "joining in," yet these are poems of sustained connection. To love is, quite simply, to risk having loved: a truth that blazes across these poems. This book-length ode to human intimacy feels its losses in its pulse-and, through its art and artfulness, its grace and empathy and attention, comes to count even them as gain. -G. C. WaldrepThis meager apocalypse. With this phrase, Kylan Rice prophesies the condition of contemporary catastrophe, whose meagerness consists of disintegration, fragmentation, fissure, fracking, exorcism, deferral. The greedy pursuit of a "usufructed gram of dew." Formally expansive, functionally recursive, An Image Not a Book concerns friendship and climate crisis in equal valences, performing memory as ouroboral recall, predicting structure from its collapse, envisioning transmigration in a hierogametic spore. Rice has written a plaint for the age, one with the shapeshifting structure of a cloud and the exhilaration of a sudden zero. -Peter O'Leary¿¿¿¿¿¿In dense evocative poetic diction, Kylan Rice maps an uneasy becoming through the work of memory, myth, and writing, which is always tragically entwined with deceit and forgetting. He asks: in this world of fragmentation, how does one keep fidelity to oneself and to those one loves? You will not find a definitive answer here, but instead a continuous stream of questions sketched in philosophical lucidity. Rice mixes beauty and difficulty, a combination so badly needed in twenty-first-century American poetry."-Laura Jaramillo Kylan Rice is the author of Incryptions, a collection of essays. He is co-author of Primer, a collection of conversations with the poet Dan Beachy-Quick, and co-editor of Southern Lights: 75 Years of the Carolina Quarterly. His poems and essays have appeared in Colorado Review, Denver Quarterly, Image, Kenyon Review Online, and West Branch, among others. He is the associate editor for The Missouri Review.

  • av F Daniel Rzicznek
    203,-

    Transversing the territory between the pastoral and the elegiac, F. Daniel Rzicznek's Settlers inhabits the hidden, wild places of the American Midwestern landscape. The idea of "settling"-that a landscape can be tamed, that a human consciousness can fall back into immobility-is one these poems grapple with and resist, all the while charting the cathartic effects of the natural world on a collective imagination dually wounded by the madness of the post-industrial era and the multiplication of tragedy via media saturation. Within the "settled" landscape, it becomes clear that nothing, in fact, can be settled. Love, compassion, forgiveness, and transcendence all turn out to be moving targets and Settlers offers glimpse after glimpse of an unstable world in whirling, mesmerizing motion. Where the exterior landscape of weather, light and water skirts the interior wilderness of dream, vision, and prayer, these poems go out walking with their feet in the marsh and their hats in the infinite clouds, hoping to find what exactly it means to be human in a world imperiled by humans, and the all the fascinating and frustrating complexities contained therein.What People Are Saying"Reading F. Daniel Rzicznek's Settlers is like putting on a pair of X-ray goggles and suddenly seeing our surroundings-lake, snow, buttermilk, car, dog-in a radically different light. By telescoping multiple time scales onto the same place, whether an imagined world without humans, a past of Civil War soldiers, or today's acts of gun violence, these poems expand what is possible in landscape poetry and offer a deeply-felt ethical stance. "Every where is a ceaseless center-," Rzicznek writes, and so poetry, this splendid book tells us, must be a ceaseless act of inclusiveness." -Tung-Hui Hu"Reading Settlers is a tactile experience, lush with precise knowledge of the abundance of the natural world. Rzicznek conjures up rural mysteries and the residue of disasters, creating a sense of déjà vu, of things carefully noticed long ago and then forgotten, now resurrected in these poems. In "Houses, Drifting," "A man wrestles / a wheelbarrow from the river's fluid din," an image that suggests what relics lurk beneath surfaces in this collection-surprising, wondrous, and, in fact, unsettling." -Mary Quade

  • av Josh Booton
    188,-

    The Miraculous Courageous is a fractured epic, a sequence which seeks not to explain but to evoke the mind of one boy and his experience with autism. In the tradition of Carson's Autobiography of Red, Booton constructs a landscape both familiar and uncanny, a territory where our inner workings burn with the luminosity of jellyfish and "darkness turns the lighthouse on." These poems are agile, slippery, glancing at the camera then quickly away, skewing the boundaries between lyric and monologue, vignette and scene. These poems are a bridge. And through their deft conflation of inner and outer worlds, the self and the other, The Miraculous Courageous marks a rich and startling immersion in the mind of autism.What People Are SayingIn this stunning sequence of sixty short monologues, Josh Booton sets a clock in motion, a minute hand that keeps lyric time, moving back and forth, outwards and inwards. The voice at its center belongs to a boy on the spectrum whose preoccupations with seahorses and Jacques Cousteau offer us glimpses of that "secret blue little aqualung" we call poetic wonder. Each perfect rectangle of verse becomes a porthole for the reader. A clear narrative progression extends its plumb-line into the dark glamour of those depths, into which the poet plunges to return with "the whole day in one hand the night another." -Carolina EbeidIf, as Socrates asserts, philosophy begins in wonder, and if, as Emily Dickinson recommends, we do well to "Tell all the truth but tell it slant," then the autistic speaker in Josh Booton's new collection The Miraculous Courageous is equal parts philosopher and poet, wondering at such mysteries as the contrast between seemingly empty ocean and "all / that life crowded so close" around a reef, and slanting us such truths as that happiness "smells exactly like tangerines" and that one need not be lonely in a world astir "with the rough of starfish / and rain on garbage can lids." -H. L. HixAbout the AuthorJosh Booton's first book, The Union of Geometry & Ash, was awarded the Dorothy Brunsman Poetry Prize. His work has been supported by grants from The University of Texas at Austin, the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Foundation and the Elizabeth George Foundation. He lives in Boise, Idaho, where he works with children and teens with autism spectrum disorder as a pediatric speech therapist.

  • av Bruce Bond
    188,-

    In his single-poem sequence, Dear Reader, Bruce Bond explores the metaphysics of reading as central to the way we negotiate a world-the evasions of our gods and monsters; our Los Angeles in flames; the daily chatter of our small, sweet, and philosophical beasts. In light of an imagined listener and the world taken as a whole, Bond sees the summons of the self in the other, and in the way the other in the self informs our sacrifices and reckoning, our speechless hesitations, our jokes and our rituals of loss. Every moment of personal and political life, interpretation holds the page of the human face, not far but far enough, and all the while, beneath our gaze, the subtext that is no text at all, where the old argument between universals and particulars breaks down, exhausted, and the real in the imagined is, by necessity, renewed.What People Are SayingDear Reader is that essential intimate epistle that comes to us in an hour of great need. It offers no answers but rather reminds us of our fundamental questions. Meticulous and measured, richly working a system of resonant recurring tropes, this sequence of sonnets give us the voice of one particular sensibility-in turns tender, earnest, honest, intelligent, witty, and wry-as it reaches out across a divide it knows cannot be crossed by language and reason alone. In a time when we confront daily the frenetic, desensitizing maelstrom of political rhetoric and a ubiquitous flood of mass media, Bruce Bond reminds us in Dear Reader of the quiet but urgent philosophical and spiritual inquiries, sometimes monstrous and animal, that define and affirm our humanity. -Kathleen GraberBruce Bond's powerful book-length poem Dear Reader arrives with the "shush of oceans, page after page," buoying forward a meditation on how we read and how we are read by others. Each reader is a choir, a city, a book "the world leafs through." Bond reckons with "inner lives / so enormous I could barely see them," chronicling the longing, cruelty, and generosity those encounters elicit. And he recognizes how one's own inner life casts a ghost-face "across the glass between us." Composed of fifty blank-verse sonnets, the book is stunning in its range and quickness, urgent and penetrating in confronting the "call of freedoms other than our own" that remain achingly near and impossibly far away. -Corey MarksAbout the AuthorBruce Bond is the author of twenty books including, most recently, Immanent Distance: Poetry and the Metaphysics of the Near at Hand (U of MI, 2015), Black Anthem (Tampa Review Prize, U of Tampa, 2016), Gold Bee (Helen C. Smith Award, Crab Orchard Award, Southern Illinois University Press, 2016), Sacrum (Four Way Books, 2017), and Blackout Starlight: New and Selected Poems 1997-2015 (E. Phillabaum Award, LSU, 2017). Four books are forthcoming. Presently he is a Regents Professor of English at University of North Texas.

  • av Simon (University of Oxford) Smith
    203,-

  • av Felicia Zamora
    188,-

  • av Donald Platt
    203,-

  • av Ana Cristina Cesare
    188,-

    Ana Cristina Cesar (1952-1983) has posthumously become one of Brazil's best known avant-garde poets. After her suicide in 1983, her innovative, mythic, and dreamlike poetry has greatly influenced subsequent generations of writers. At Your Feet was originally published as a poetic sequence and later became part of a longer hybrid work-- sometimes prose, sometimes verse--documenting the life and mind of a forcefully active literary woman. Cesar, who also worked internationally as a journalist and translator, often found inspiration in the writings of other poets, among them Emily Dickinson, Armando Freitas Filho, and Gertrude Stein. Her innovative writing has been featured in Sun and Moon's classic anthology Nothing the Sun Could Not Explain--20 Contemporary Brazilian Poets (2000). Poet Brenda Hillman and her mother Helen Hillman (a native speaker of Portuguese) worked with Brazilian poet SebastiÃo Edson Macedo and translator/editor Katrina Dodson to render as faithfully as possible the intricately layered poems of this legendary writer. At Your Feet includes both the English translation and original Portuguese.

  • - The Poem as Installation Art
    av Nicholas Pesques
    203,-

  • av Siobhan Scarry
    172,-

  • av Ethel Rackin
    203,-

  • av Jennifer Atkinson
    172,-

  • av Christopher Kondrich
    203,-

  • av Aidan Semmens
    203,-

  • - Selected Poems
    av Jeongrye Choi
    248,-

  • av Hannah Craig
    203,-

  • av Jennie Neighbors
    172,-

  • av Carolyn Guinzio
    172,-

  • av Miguel Hernandez
    219,99

  • - [Poems]
    av Morgan Lucas Schuldt
    172,-

  • av Cindy Savett
    218,-

  • av Thomas David Lisk
    172,-

  • av Daniel Newton Tiffany
    172,-

  • av Nicholas Pesqus & Nicolas Pesques
    172,-

  • av Ger Killeen
    172,-

  • av Attilio Bertolucci
    203,-

  • - A History of Writing Across the Curriculum
     
    401,-

  • av Peter Riley
    172,-

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