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BARTLETT?S WORDS FOR THE WEDDING is an essential resource for
anyone planning a wedding ceremony or renewing vows. Comprising
passages from Plato, Sappho, Shakespeare, Shelley, Auden, Rilke,
and many others, this gorgeous edition is a source for inspiration
and an invaluable core text from which to select passages.
Beautifully packaged, BARTLETT?S WORDS FOR THE WEDDING includes
prose and poetry selections from ancient times to the modern day. A
sample from St. Augustine: ?What does love look like? It has the
hands to help others. It has the feet to hasten to the poor and
needy. It has eyes to see misery and want. It has the ears to hear
the sighs and sorrows of men. That is what love looks like.?
Written by 100 American poets, Isn't It Romantic offers an engaging
look at how contemporary poets respond afresh to the well-trammeled
territory of the love poem. Award-winning poets from across the
country lend their voices to this important document of
contemporary poetry. The book also features a bonus full-length
audio CD of love songs by independent recording artists. Anthology
Contributors include: Karen Volkman, Joe Wenderoth, Eleni
Sikelianos, Juliana Spahr, Brenda Shaughnessy, Matthew Rohrer,
Claudia Rankine, D.A. Powell, Hoa Nguyen, Noelle Kocot, Lisa
Jarnot, Kevin Young, Brian Henry, Christine Hume, Matthea Harvey,
Arielle Greenberg, Thalia Field, Thomas Sayers Ellis, Timothy
Donnelly, Olena Kalytiak Davis, Stephen Burt, Joshua Beckman, and
more. Contributors to the audio CD include: David Berman, Richard
Buckner, Vic Chesnutt, Ida, Doug Martsch, Mark Mulcahy, Megan
Reiley, Jenny Toomey and more. Editor Brett Fletcher Lauer is the
poetry in motion director at the Poetry Society of America and
poetry editor of CROWD Magazine. He is the co-editor of Poetry In
Motion from Coast to Coast (W. W. Norton, 2002) and his poems have
appeared in BOMB, Boston Review, and elsewhere. He lives in
Brooklyn. Editor Aimee Kelley is the editor and publisher of CROWD
Magazine. She received her BA in English from UC Berkeley and her
MFA from the New School for Social Research. She has worked at
non-profit organizations such as the Council of Literary Magazines
& Presses and the Academy of American Poets. Her poems have
appeared in Denver Quarterly, Spinning Jenny, 811 Books and
elsewhere. Charles Simic (Introduction) is the author of many books
of poems, including The World Doesn't End, winner of the 1990
Pulitzer Prize. He teaches writing at the University of New
Hampshire.
Your wife is having an affair with my husband. It has caused some
trouble in my marriage and I thought you should know. One phone
call in December 2005 begins the compelling, unpredictable story of
Fake Missed Connections. A child of divorce with an already fragile
sense of trust, Lauer unravels at the betrayal, begins divorce
proceedings, and moves back to Brooklyn where he spends too much
time alone, fixated on the idea that a murderer from 1898 might be
haunting his apartment. Eventually, as he starts to peruse online
dating profiles, he becomes obsessed with "missed connections"
precisely because they provide what online dating doesn't: a story.
He begins writing phony missed connections to post on Craigslist
and, though he feels a stab of guilt when he posts them, he is
hopelessly intrigued by the responses he receives. Real documents
illuminate Brett's dating adventures, from love (and hate) letters
and instant message conversations to Brett's online dating profile
and wedding announcement. Fake Missed Connections is an
unconventional yet deeply moving look at the modern search for
love, the ways in which we fail to communicate, and the quest for a
genuine moment of connection.
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