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In her wide-ranging third book, poet Kathleen Flenniken undertakes
the difficult task of re-seeing what is before us. Post Romantic
fuses personal memory with national and ecological upheaval,
interweaving narratives of family, nuclear history, love of
country, and a dangerous age moving too fast. Flenniken takes these
challenging moments—bits and pieces of childhood, marriage,
cultural touchstones—and holds them up to the light, seeking
comfort in a complicated world that is at once heartbreaking,
confounding, and dear.
In Christopher Howell's twelfth collection of poems, his gifts for
elegy, humor, and lyricism are on full display. The Grief of a
Happy Life explores the interplay between memory and imagination,
celebrating the ways that happiness and grief inform one another
and give our lives fullness and vitality. Arranged in four
sections, Howell's poems feature not only these concerns, but a
large and various cast of characters as well. Aeneas, Saint
Theresa, Ovid, Kierkegaard, a German submarine, and so much more
are woven together with Howell's trademark precision and
accessibility into exquisite tableaux, each providing a view of
both what we must live with and what we must not live without.
Inspired by Alain Resnais’s Hiroshima mon amour, and sharing the
spirit of Tomas Transtromer’s Baltics and Yehuda Amichai’s
Time, Republic Café is a meditation on love during a time of
violence, and a tally of what appears and disappears in every
moment. Mindful of epigenetic experience as our bodies become
living vessels for history’s tragedies, David Biespiel praises
not only the essentialness of our human memory, but also the
sanctity of our flawed, human forgetting. A single sequence,
arranged in fifty-four numbered sections, Republic Café details
the experience of lovers in Portland, Oregon, on the eve and days
following September 11, 2001. To touch a loved one’s bare skin,
even in the midst of great tragedy, is simultaneously an act of
remembering and forgetting. This is a tale of love and darkness, a
magical portrait of the writer as a moral and imaginative
participant in the political life of his nation.
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lore (Paperback)
Davis McCombs; Foreword by Linda Bierds
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Drawn from the rich folk traditions of his native Mammoth Cave
region in Kentucky as well as the folklore of his adopted Ozark
Mountains of Arkansas, the poems in Davis McCombs's third
collection exist along the fraught lines where nature and
agriculture collide or in those charged moments where modernity
intrudes on an archaic world. These poems celebrate out-of-the-way
places, the lore of plants, wild animals and their unknowable
lives, and nearly forgotten ways of being and talking and doing.
Rendered in a language of great lexical juxtapositions, here are
days of soil and labor, nights lit only by firelight, and the
beings, possibly not of this world, lured like moths to its flames.
McCombs, always a poet of place and of rootedness, writes poems
teetering between two locales, one familiar but achingly distant,
one bewildering but alluringly present.
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