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ILLUSTRATED COLOR EDITION "Colen is not timid about addressing the
perversities of American culture head-on... The subjects are dark,
generating perhaps more discomfort than comfort, but Colen reminds
us that the human heart is still quite functional." -D. A. Powell,
Drunken Boat Waiting up for the End of the World examines 20th /
21st century conspiracy theories from a poetic standpoint.
First-person narrator road trips around the globe-from New York
City, Dallas, Atlanta, Georgia, and Gakona, Alaska to Area 51,
Lockerbie, Scotland, London, Paris, and Indonesia-to visit
firsthand the sites of alleged secret plans and alliances and their
sometimes cataclysmic outcomes, investigating through verse such
topics as black helicopters, chemtrails, the North American Union,
the fluoride conspiracy, and the JFK assassination, and exploring
possible links between government and corporate corruption and the
on-the-ground results of continued global overconsumption. "So
smart and quintessentially American" - Suzanne Paola, author of
Body Toxic and The Lives of the Saints "The poets I long for are
the ones who aim their instruments at the eyes of culture and shoot
without question. Elizabeth Colen is one of those poets I always
trust to let it all be done Count the bodies afterward The
conspiracy of Waiting Up for the End of the World for instance,
it's her newest, brilliant collection. 'Arsonists are such failures
at love.' See, she just tells us where fire fails. And as the house
burns down THIS BOOK is what you should grab when running to the
door. Wave it in the faces of failure, which is another magic of
waking us." -CAConrad, author of THE BOOK OF FRANK "In Elizabeth J.
Colen's Waiting Up for the End of the World, conspiracy theories
provide the dark and obsessive scaffolding for poems woven with
myths of paranoia as well as fragmented scenes of psychological
tension. Colen transforms her sensational subjects with an eerie
calm or giddy perversity, committed to juxtapositions and details
that shiver with a grotesque luminosity: wig strands "read" a palm,
coffee grounds in a mug form the shape of a skull, a brother
staples a girl's arm to her sleeve. The duende who beckons from
these poems is both pulsing alarm and violent seducer. In Colen's
realm of danger, we've "followed the sound of the siren." -Anna
Journey, author of If Birds Gather Your Hair for Nesting "In
Waiting Up for the End of the World: Conspiracies, Elizabeth Colen
gives us a book of poems built around conspiracy tales, those
guiding myths of our culture, a book so smart and quintessentially
American it feels both uniquely personal and blazingly collective.
Colen probes the nature of belief and gives us paranoia as
resistance, storytelling as power, and the personal as inextricably
tied to the social and political. 'I am eating this piece of
cake./The first piece was for me, /the second for the end of the
world, ' she writes in 'Day After, Over London, ' a poem that
reimagines the crash of Pam Am Flight 103. The poems, stylistically
flawless and each a jagged shard of the American dream, challenge
us to rethink what we believe we know about the defining tales of
our culture." -Suzanne Paola, author of Body Toxic and The Lives of
the Saints
BLACK AND WHITE EDITION "So smart and quintessentially American" -
Suzanne Paola, author of Body Toxic and The Lives of the Saints
Waiting up for the End of the World examines 20th / 21st century
conspiracy theories from a poetic standpoint. First-person narrator
road trips around the globe-from New York City, Dallas, Atlanta,
Georgia, and Gakona, Alaska to Area 51, Lockerbie, Scotland,
London, Paris, and Indonesia-to visit firsthand the sites of
alleged secret plans and alliances and their sometimes cataclysmic
outcomes, investigating through verse such topics as black
helicopters, chemtrails, the North American Union, the fluoride
conspiracy, and the JFK assassination, and exploring possible links
between government and corporate corruption and the on-the-ground
results of continued global overconsumption.
"Colen is not timid about addressing the perversities of American
culture head-on... The subjects are dark, generating perhaps more
discomfort than comfort, but Colen reminds us that the human heart
is still quite functional." -D. A. Powell, Drunken Boat
"The poets I long for are the ones who aim their instruments at
the eyes of culture and shoot without question. Elizabeth Colen is
one of those poets I always trust to let it all be done Count the
bodies afterward The conspiracy of Waiting Up for the End of the
World for instance, it's her newest, brilliant collection.
'Arsonists are such failures at love.' See, she just tells us where
fire fails. And as the house burns down THIS BOOK is what you
should grab when running to the door. Wave it in the faces of
failure, which is another magic of waking us." -CAConrad, author of
THE BOOK OF FRANK
"In Elizabeth J. Colen's Waiting Up for the End of the World,
conspiracy theories provide the dark and obsessive scaffolding for
poems woven with myths of paranoia as well as fragmented scenes of
psychological tension. Colen transforms her sensational subjects
with an eerie calm or giddy perversity, committed to juxtapositions
and details that shiver with a grotesque luminosity: wig strands
"read" a palm, coffee grounds in a mug form the shape of a skull, a
brother staples a girl's arm to her sleeve. The duende who beckons
from these poems is both pulsing alarm and violent seducer. In
Colen's realm of danger, we've "followed the sound of the siren."
-Anna Journey, author of If Birds Gather Your Hair for Nesting
"In Waiting Up for the End of the World: Conspiracies, Elizabeth
Colen gives us a book of poems built around conspiracy tales, those
guiding myths of our culture, a book so smart and quintessentially
American it feels both uniquely personal and blazingly collective.
Colen probes the nature of belief and gives us paranoia as
resistance, storytelling as power, and the personal as inextricably
tied to the social and political. 'I am eating this piece of
cake./The first piece was for me, /the second for the end of the
world, ' she writes in 'Day After, Over London, ' a poem that
reimagines the crash of Pam Am Flight 103. The poems, stylistically
flawless and each a jagged shard of the American dream, challenge
us to rethink what we believe we know about the defining tales of
our culture." -Suzanne Paola, author of Body Toxic and The Lives of
the Saints
If I were Colen's agent, I'd pitch these poems to a movie producer
as "David Lynch meets Gertrude Stein." Money for Sunsets, like
Tender Buttons, is syntactically rich and varied, using fragments,
repetition, and word associations.If I were Colen's agent, I might
not mention her complicated and smartobservations on women,
violence, and money - since I'm assuming that most movie producers
are capitalists. In "Des Oeufs," Colen writes, "A naked woman as a
motif is too easy." Too easy, indeed. Innovative and evocative,
these poems have arrived at just the right cultural moment. And I,
for one, am grateful they're here. - Denise Duhamel, Judge, 2009
Steel Toe Books Prize in Poetry
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