Thirty-Seven: a book of poems

Thirty-Seven: a book of poems
Author :
Publisher : Lulu.com
Total Pages : 359
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781365199035
ISBN-13 : 1365199037
Rating : 4/5 (35 Downloads)

Synopsis Thirty-Seven: a book of poems by : Jason Tomlinson

These are all the poems written and posted by Jason Tomlinson on his 37th trip around the sun.

Thirty-Seven

Thirty-Seven
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 288
Release :
ISBN-10 : 1945814861
ISBN-13 : 9781945814860
Rating : 4/5 (61 Downloads)

Synopsis Thirty-Seven by : Peter Stenson

The Survivors, their members known only by the order in which they joined, live alone in a rural Colorado mansion. They believe that sickness bears honesty, and that honesty bears change. Fueled by the ritualized Cytoxan treatments that leave them on the verge of death, they instigate the Day of Gifts, a day that spells shocking violence and the group's demise. Enter Mason Hues, formerly known as Thirty-Seven, the group's final member and the only one both alive and free. Eighteen years old and living in a spartan apartment after his release from a year of intensive mental health counseling, he takes a job at a thrift shop and expects to while away his days as quietly and unobtrusively as possible. But when his enigmatic boss Talley learns his secret, she comes to believe that there is still hope in the Survivor philosophy. She pushes Mason to start the group over again--this time with himself as One. PartFight Club, partThe Girls, and entirely unlike anything you've ever experienced, Peter Stenson's Thirty-Seven is an audacious and austere novel that explores our need to belong. Our need to be loved. Our need to believe in something greater than ourselves, and ultimately our capacity for self-delusion.

Thirty-seven Small Songs & Thirteen Silences

Thirty-seven Small Songs & Thirteen Silences
Author :
Publisher : Kentville, N.S. : Gaspereau Press
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 1554470013
ISBN-13 : 9781554470013
Rating : 4/5 (13 Downloads)

Synopsis Thirty-seven Small Songs & Thirteen Silences by : Jan Zwicky

For the past several years, Jan Zwicky has been developing a definition and working examples of the word "lyric." Her writing has taken the shape of poetry and philosophy, neither necessarily confined to the traditions of those genres. Thirty-seven Small Songs & Thirteen Silences is the latest in this ongoing focus, previously explored in collections like Songs for Relinquishing the Earth (1998) and in her philosophic works, including Lyric Philosophy (1992) and Wisdom & Metaphor (Gaspereau Press, 2003). The songs in this collection are odes, addresses and apostrophes, to household fixtures, human emotions, shades of light, seasons, stretches of land, departures, sounds and solitude. Working with the most associative details, Zwicky has whittled encounters with her subjects down to their integral and resounding notes. A single light shining from a house in the winter is the bathtub's call to its tired owner. Dew on the grass is the long note of calm in a hurried departure. Every presence contains absence, every pause embodies continuation, every house has "one chink open to the wind." These are songs to the negative space around solid shapes. Wild grape, nuthatch and August are in part defined by the time around their existence. Bath, laundry and grate have a life both for and beyond their owner, and it is upon these tensions that the poet's fondness develops. Zwicky's musical sensibilities give these poems their resolve. The precise lilt of her verse amounts to a resonating frequency for each of her subjects, with the O of each address sounding the driving note. In music Zwicky has captured the energy and suddenness of realizations like homecoming, departure, familiarity and alienation. Her songs walk the tightrope between thinking and being, steadying and strengthening the act of imagination that maintains contact between past, present and future. The seven studies in this collection signal a slower tempo, a downshift into the clipped stillness of memory. Summer months, garden gate, childhood house and silent afternoons are summoned to the surface for a look. These give way to six silences: three-line moments of pause or hush that request careful entrance and exit. Like still lifes or haikus, these silences suspend time within time. Basil springs motionless, grass ripens, pollen settles. As with the absences contained in her songs, Zwicky's silences embody the tenuous balance between thought and experience. Thirty-seven Small Songs & Thirteen Silences is a vital addition to a remarkable body of work. Zwicky's lyricism proves to the senses what lies within the parameters set by her prose. The trade edition of this book is a 5 x 8-inch, smyth-sewn paperback bound in card stock with a letterpress-printed jacket. The text is printed offset on laid paper.

The Generosity

The Generosity
Author :
Publisher : Paraclete Press
Total Pages : 129
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781640605169
ISBN-13 : 1640605169
Rating : 4/5 (69 Downloads)

Synopsis The Generosity by : Luci Shaw

“Rejoice, readers, as you receive the generosity of Luci Shaw's 76 new grace-infused parable poems. Autobiography once more merges with theology as these poems illuminate in splendored natural detail how the seasons of creation parallel and explain the seasons of her life as a poet. Again and again, these poems shower us with glorious epiphanies from the natural world as it reflects God's generosity at work such as “spring's impossible news of green.” These poems confirm that in poetry as in faith “ripeness is all.” Like Wordsworth, Luci is celebrated for being a highly gifted landscape poet whose works are rich in imagery from the physical world—meadows filled with seeds, flowers, and also poems which are like "shoots" in Luci's writing life. Animals, too, great and small (beetles, cricket, and voles to bears and whales) play a major role in Luci's poetics of creation; God is likened to a great bear who leaves paw tracks for us to follow. In their deep faith and vibrant colors and designs, the poems in Generosity might be considered Luci's Book of Kells. We need to be like Luci's father who carried her poems in his briefcase to show his friends.” —Philip C. Kolin, Author, Reaching Forever: Poems; Distinguished Professor of English (Emeritus), University of Southern Mississippi

Ghost of

Ghost of
Author :
Publisher : Omnidawn Open
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 1632430525
ISBN-13 : 9781632430526
Rating : 4/5 (25 Downloads)

Synopsis Ghost of by : Diana Khoi Nguyen

Winner of the Omnidawn Open Poetry Book Prize

Love That Dog

Love That Dog
Author :
Publisher : A&C Black
Total Pages : 113
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780747557494
ISBN-13 : 0747557497
Rating : 4/5 (94 Downloads)

Synopsis Love That Dog by : Sharon Creech

This is an utterly original and completely beguiling prose novel about a boy who has to write a poem, and then another, and then even more. Soon the little boy is writing about all sorts of things he has not really come to terms with, and astounding things start to happen.

Selected Poems

Selected Poems
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 168
Release :
ISBN-10 : UOM:39015005895738
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (38 Downloads)

Synopsis Selected Poems by : Robert Frost

Anterooms

Anterooms
Author :
Publisher : Houghton Mifflin
Total Pages : 63
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0547358113
ISBN-13 : 9780547358116
Rating : 4/5 (13 Downloads)

Synopsis Anterooms by : Richard Wilbur

Celebrates the human condition through reflections on nature and love, while a series of translations bring other authors' poems and riddles into a new light.

Selfwolf

Selfwolf
Author :
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Total Pages : 88
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780226313887
ISBN-13 : 0226313883
Rating : 4/5 (87 Downloads)

Synopsis Selfwolf by : Mark Halliday

In his third book of poems, Mark Halliday grapples with the endless struggle between self-concern and awareness of the rights of others. Through humor, ironic twists, and refreshing candor, these poems confront a variety of situations—death, divorce, artistic egotism and envy, personal relationships—where the very idea of self is under siege. "If Selfwolf were a pop music CD, it would be hailed as Mark Halliday's breakthrough album. . . . This third collection of poems teems with unsparing confessions of misdirected lust, lost faith, regret and a winningly goofy cheerfulness in the face of all that bad stuff. . . . The informal, conversational quality of Halliday's work almost hides its artfulness, which seems to be precisely his intention."—Ken Tucker, New York Times Book Review "With unflinching, often comic honesty about how 'ego-fetid, hostile, grasping' we are, Halliday exposes the self's wolfish hungers and weaknesses."—Andrew Epstein, Boston Review "Mark Halliday's new book offers more of his trademark riffs on self-consciousness. His subversive, surprising, hugely enjoyable poems will make you laugh out loud, squirm in uncomfortable recognition, and appreciate anew the comedy of our daily battles for self-preservation. . . reading Halliday is pure delight. . . . I love the daring and intelligence with which Halliday skates along the shifting boundary between self within and world outside. Selfwolf slows down our habitual negotiations between 'in here' and 'out there,' exposing the edgy comedy of how we survive."—Damaris Moore, Express Books