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A novel of young women and men, struggling to find love and
fulfilling work, who find their lives disrupted when their network
of cooperatives, formed in a Southwestern city with the collapse of
the economy, is drawn into the movement to protect a mountain
sacred to the Navajos from a military takeover.
Collected poems, 1967-2012 From the Foreword by Jack Hirschman,
former Poet Laureate of San Francisco: "I think I can say a few
words about what makes American poetry tick..., and by way of that
indicate the importance of this book and John Curl in the pantheon
of revolutionary poets... it is 'transform, transform' that John
Curl is forever sounding and resounding with his depth charges...
We're talking about transforming a society totally in which process
poetry serves as a beaconing forward. Curl's signature achievement
linguistically, it seems to me, is to have developed a language
where lines of images often are contrary to one another and that
friction or opposition does more than 'surrealize' the lines (Curl
knows the techniques of all the avant-garde poetry movements of the
20th century)-what he is writing is often a poetry of dialectical
motion itself. The singular intent behind John's writing is to
actualize in poetry the urgent need for working-class
consciousness, ... and Curl succeeds in so many poems and in so
many imaginings in this book that one realizes that Revolutionary
Alchemy is a book of major importance. John Curl... has earned a
place-with this book of poems-among the foremost revolutionary
American poets since the end of WW2." From Sharon Doubiago,
National Book Award nominee: "John Curl's Revolutionary Alchemy is
a magnificent account of a radical poet's work, the lifetime of
poems, the inner story of an important generation, its psyche, the
history. What deep and meaningful pleasure to read this alchemy,
mix of love with the bombs. 'I cried when I heard the war was over
and/ when I remember/the war still rages on/ I cry again...To
resolve my pain I/must resolve yours....'" From Art Goodtimes, Poet
Laureate of the Western Slope: "The procreative force, the cosmic
sensibility, the oracular insight Curl brings to the reader is
constantly astonishing. These poems help define and give rise to a
verse of the surreal poetarian vision of the left. Here unrealism
attempts to seize and transform imperialist reality. Curl writes
like the lead miner in a pit crew. As such, he is a major poet on
the people's side. There is not a thing to be bought off in his
poems, there is only the amazement of truth." From Mary Rudge,
author of Water Planet: "A Master Poet who uses language in a
remarkable, innovative way, he gives us information on
contradictions in the evolving state of human consciousness. The
tensile lines of these poems are a strong loom holding the strength
of an interwoven theme of Social Justice making deliberate design
through the poet's understanding of actions and attitudes. John
Curl shows us the undersides of clouds and cultures but also shows
immutable order in chaos. He can, in a single poem, give at least
15 ways of changing personal, social, political darkness, including
purification by fire. Though some are seemingly surreal, strange
and new, your intellect tells you each line is someone's reality at
the core."
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