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If religious poetry may be thought of as a great river fed, in the
English language, by two main streams, the devotional tradition,
leading in recent times to Anne Sexton and John Berryman, and the
contrastingly philosophical tradition, exemplified by William
Blake, it is to the latter that this new book by Kelly Cherry
belongs. In the poems of God's Loud Hand, Cherry conducts, often
not at all devotionally, often with an honesty that precludes the
emphasis on self that tends to be present in devotional poetry
(""Lord save me,"" ""Lord forgive me,"" ""Lord help me""), a
metaphorical investigation of the theological ideas. These are
fiercely intellectual poems, which, in the way of T.S. Eliot, are
more akin in their stringent analysis to Tillich or Niebuhr,
perhaps, than to someone like Simone Weil. At their base in a
willingness to ask Abraham's great question, ""Shall not the Judge
of all the earth judge wisely?"" This intellectual boldness reveals
itself in a formal argumentation rare in contemporary poetry. Like
Donne or Hopkins, Kelly Cherry defines her terms, orders her points
logically, no vagary or sentimentality appears here. The result of
such exactitude is a kind of clarity, a grace, that seems to lift
the poems off the page, to cause them to rise, make their own kind
of ascension. It is as if these poems were larks, an exaltation of
larks, as they say, that rise each morning to heaven's gate, but
instead of singing hymns, they sing philosophy's own music. And in
what a remarkable variety of keys, what a range of modes and moods.
From the opening poems of historical and mythological drama,
through the passionate love songs of the second sections, through
the dark night of the soul that takes place in the third, to the
orchestral outburst of the final group of poems, poetry celebrating
its own freedom ot be poetry, in all these parts (""a chorus of
lyrics,"" one might say) there is a symphonic unity that
astonishes, an ode to joy.
An outstanding collection of poetry about inventions and inventors,
real and imagined, assembled by editor and poet, Bernadette Geyer,
author of The Scabbard of Her Throat and a chapbook, What Remains.
"I was awed by the seemingly endless number of ways that poets
approached the subject. Naturally, there are poems about real
inventions-from clocks to pantyhose to chemotherapy drugs-as well
as poems that conjure fantastical inventions-such as a contraption
for kissing and a happy marriage machine. While some of the poems
in this anthology provide searing commentary on the dreadfulness of
some of the creations birthed by inventors, other poems offer us a
view into the stories behind inventions, as well as the lives of
real and imagined inventors. Whether invoking humor, irony,
historic research, or imagination, the poems in this anthology
converse not only with each other, but also with their readers and
the world at large, in service to the continued human drive to
create solutions-even to problems we didn't know we had." -
Bernadette Geyer Poems by Alex Dreppec, Brett Foster, Clare Louise
Harmon, Daniel Hales, David Mook, Donald Illich, Dorene O'Brien, F.
J. Bergmann, FJP Langheim, Gwen Hart, H.M. Jones, Holly
Karapetkova, J.G. McClure, Janet McNally, Jean Bonin, Jerry
Bradley, Jesseca Cornelson, Jessica Goodfellow, Jo Angela Edwins,
Joel Allegretti, Julie E. Bloemeke, Karen Bovenmyer, Karen
Skolfield, Kathryn Rickel, Keith Stevenson, Kelly Cherry, Kim
Roberts, Kirsten Imani Kasai, Kristine Ong Muslim, Laura Shovan,
Magus Magnus, Malka Older, Marcela Sulak, Marjorie Maddox, Mia
Leonin, Nolan Liebert, Norbert Gora, Rie Sheridan Rose, Rikki
Santer, Robert Kenny, Sarah Key, Scott Beal, Shelley Puhak, Steven
Wingate, Susan Bucci Mockler, Tanis MacDonald, Tanya Bryan, Tricia
Asklar, W. Luther Jett, William Minor, and William Winfield Wright
The Penn Greek Drama Series presents original literary translations
of the entire corpus of classical Greek drama: tragedies, comedies,
and satyr plays. It is the only contemporary series of all the
surviving work of Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes,
and Menander. This volume presents fresh versions of Sophocles's
Theban plays, which include the most famous of the ancient Greek
tragedies, King Oedipus. Sophocles reveals the history of Oedipus
from the fulfillment of the oracle that foretold he would kill his
father, outwit the Sphinx, marry his mother, and have a family,
through his banishment and tortured death as a blind man and the
attempted redemption of the family by his daughter, Antigone.
Translations are by Jascha Kessler (King Oedipus), George Garrett
(Oedipus at Colonus), and Kelly Cherry (Antigone).
Winner of the 2013 L. E. Phillabaum Poetry Award In her ninth
collection of poetry, Kelly Cherry explores the domain of language.
Clear and accessible, the poems in The Life and Death of Poetry
examine the intricacies and limitations of communication and its
ability to help us transcend our world and lives. The poet begins
with silence and animal sound before taking on literature, public
discourse, and the particular art of poetry. The sequence ""Welsh
Table Talk"" considers the unsaid, or unsayable, as a man, his
daughter, and his daughter's friend sojourn on Bardsey Island in
Wales with the father's female companion. The innocence and playful
chatter of the children throw into sharp relief a desolate
landscape and failed communication between the adults. In the
book's final section, Cherry considers translation, great art's
grand sublimity, and the relation of poetry -- the divine tongue --
to the everyday world. Witty, poignant, wise, and joyous, The Life
and Death of Poetry offers a masterful new collection from an
accomplished poet.
In Fred Chappell’s introduction to The Kelly Cherry Reader, he
writes, “Cherry is a flambeau example of the extremely conscious
artist, a writer who mediates ceaselessly upon the problems and
possibilities of the poem, the novel, the short story and the
essay. She ponders what she has done and how she has done it; she
thinks about the approaches and techniques she has employed, and
she labors to extend and expand them. This kind of effort is not
common to all writers, many of whom will write this year pretty
much the same novel they wrote year before last, the same poem they
wrote twenty years ago.” Cherry has long been a writer whose work
has remained vital and, due to her diligence, fresh. Here, in the
Reader, she collects a body of work, much of it no longer in print,
and permits us to remap and re-explore where her writing has come
from, where it has gone, and where it is bound yet to go; it
reacquaints long-time fans and invites new readers to discover the
importance of her work.
In Observing the Invisible, Kelly Cherry crafts poems that explore
the ever-evolving realm of modern physics, confronting the
invisibilities and mysteries of the material world. She leverages
challenging ideas into a space of contemplative wonder as the book
moves from external observation into an increasingly inward space
of personal reflection and expression. Throughout, Observing the
Invisible remains deliberate in its concentration on what cannot
be, almost as if the poems are being erased even as they are being
written. Acknowledging that such contradictions cannot sustain
themselves for long, Cherry seeks out these difficulties and
ultimately finds resolutions.
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