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For Now: New and Collected Poems, 1979-2017 represents more than
forty years of the work of the poet Daniel Weeks. Although many of
the poems have been drawn from his seven published books and
chapbooks, others have previously appeared only in literary
journals or have never before appeared in print. "My goal has
always been to write poems that cannot be mistaken for prose,"
Weeks has said, and readers have remarked on the lyricism, rhythmic
flow, and musical prosody of his work as well as its vivid,
hard-edged imagery and wide cultural and historical resonances.
The essays from the pen of Daniel Weeks in A More Prosaic Light
range from social and political commentary to literary criticism
and reminiscences about the literary and cultural scene on the
Jersey Shore. Weeks tackles topics as diverse as Hollywood movies,
middle school jitters, Thanksgiving, the dying fishing industry in
New Jersey, Edison's phonograph, heat waves, the great Englishtown
Auction, Romantic poetry, and the elusive American Dream. Weeks's
literary essays also range widely from the poets of the British
canon-Coleridge, Keats, and Yeats-to American moderns and
contemporaries-Amiri Baraka, Charles Olson, Robert Pinsky, and
Louise Gluck. The essays and reviews here are interspersed with
Weeks's reminiscences of his encounters with various writers, which
provide an entertaining inside view of the literary scene on the
Jersey Shore during the late twentieth and early twenty-first
centuries.
This brief guidebook assists you in mastering the difficult concept
of pushing electrons that is vital to your success in Organic
Chemistry. With an investment of only 12 to 16 hours of self-study
you can have a better understanding of how to write resonance
structures and will become comfortable with bond-making and
bond-breaking steps in organic mechanisms. A paper-on-pencil
approach uses active involvement and repetition to teach you to
properly push electrons to generate resonance structures and write
organic mechanisms with a minimum of memorization. Compatible with
any organic chemistry textbook.
This Broken Shore is a literary journal featuring poetry, prose
fiction, essays, and literary criticism from living writers
connected to New Jersey.
My purpose in making the translations which follow was simply to
better understand these important poems and to practice reading
French. In the process, I consulted some other translations,
notably Roger Fry's beautiful work on Mallarme, some translations
of other Symbolist poets by C.F. MacIntyre, and the prose
translations Carol Clark made of Baudelaire. I decided to do a
poetic translation of my own whenever the French original touched
an emotional chord for me and when I thought I could contribute
something beyond what others had already done in their English
renderings.
Daniel J. Weeks's published collections of poems include X Poems
(Blast Press, 1990), Ancestral Songs (Libra Publishers, Inc.,
1992), Indignities (Mellen Poetry Press, 1999), and Characters
(Blast Press, 2008). His poems have appeared in The Cimarron
Review, The Roanoke Review Mudfish, Fox Cry, Zone 3, SLANT, Voices
International, Fennel Stalk, Mobius, The Sulphur River Poetry
Review, The Tucumcari Review, and many other publications. Weeks
lives in Eatontown, N.J., with his wife, Jackie, and their two
children, Jared and Rachel.
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