Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2024

Bøker i Crab Orchard Series in Poetry-serien

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  • av Bruce Bond
    296,-

    This title takes its cue from Wallace Stevens's Harmonium, bringing a finely honed talent to classic poetic questions concerning music, the march of progress, and the relationship between reality and the imagination. Blending humour and pathos, Bruce Bond examines the absurdities of contemporary life and explores the various roles music and art play in the human experience.

  • av Tory Adkisson
    307,-

    Intensely and unapologetically homoerotic in content and theme, The Flesh Between Us sensuously conducts the meetings between strangers, between lovers, between friends and family, between eater and eaten, between the soul and the body that contains it.

  • av Derek N. Otsuji
    337,-

    Lyrical and warm, Derek Otsuji's voice sounds out a sinew of words that make the remnants of heritage and home durable. In these poems each new generation seeks to reimagine for itself the elusive American Dream.

  • av Luisa A. Igloria
    337,-

    Crossing oceans and generations, from her childhood home in Baguio City, the Philippines, to her immigrant home in Virginia, poet Luisa A. Igloria demonstrates how even our most personal and intimate experiences are linked to the larger collective histories that came before.

  • av Matthew Austin Wimberley
    337,-

    In 2012 Matthew Wimberley took a two-month journey, traveling and living out of his car, during which time he had planned to spread his father's ashes. By trip's end, the ashes remained, but Wimberley had begun a conversation with his deceased father that is continued here in his debut collection.

  • av Brian Barker
    296,-

    These prose poems read like dreams and nightmares, fables and myths. With a dark whimsicality, Brian Barker explores such topics as extinction, power, class, the consequences of tyranny and war, and the ongoing destruction of the environment in the name of progress.

  • av E.C. Belli
    296,-

    By turns stoic and ravaged, but always with gutting honesty, E.C. Belli invites readers to consider the smallest rooms of the intimate in this first collection. With each poem pared down to an elemental language both slight and clear, Belli's work exhibits a surprising muscularity in its poise.

  • av Leslie Williams
    366,-

    The speaker in this collection seeks an understanding of the darkness of suicide and mortal illness in the light of Christian faith. Poet Leslie Williams captures this light in tender and piercing poems that traverse a grieving world where healing is always possible but never assured: my God can do this, but my God / might not.

  • av Corrie Williamson
    296,-

    Travels between early 1800s Virginia and Missouri and present-day western Montana, a place where "bats sail the river of dark". In their crosscutting, the poems in this collection reflect on American progress; technology, exploration, and environment; and the ever-changing landscape at the intersection of wilderness and civilization.

  • - Poems by Sass Brown
    av Sass. Brown
    366,-

    Sass Brown's darkly funny debut collection of poems explores both the isolation and the absurdity of twenty-something apartment living. The world Brown creates in USA1000 overflows with infomercials, classic Hollywood films, billboard messages, strip clubs, and fortunetellers, illuminating our complex relationship with consumerism.

  • av Hala Alyan
    337,-

    In her third poetry collection, Hijra, Hala Alyan creates poems of migration and flight reflecting and bearing witness to the haunting particulars in her transnational journey as well as those of her mother, her mother's sister, the lost aunts of her father in Gaza, and her Syrian grandmother.

  • av Jesse Lee Kercheval
    267,-

    A collection of poems that examines the enduring themes of time, mortality, and love as revealed through the power of silent film. It celebrates the flickering tales of madness and adventure, drama and love, which are all too often left to decay within forgotten vaults.

  • av Jennifer Richter
    296,-

    Jennifer Richter's penetrating second collection of poems, No Acute Distress, introduces us to the unspoken struggles and unanticipated epiphanies of illness and motherhood, subjects rarely explored together in contemporary poetry.

  • av Gregory Kimbrell
    366,-

    The poems of The Primitive Observatory, set roughly in the Gilded Age, take readers into a dreamy, alluring world where hapless travellers, doomed heirs, and other colourful types grapple with horrors. Fans of David Lynch, Franz Kafka, Edward Gorey and the like will be startled, excited, and pleased by this entertaining and disturbing book of poetry.

  • av Moira Linehan
    296,-

    In this collection, poet Moira Linehan explores, questions, and ultimately celebrates her attempt to live in the temple of the present. After learning she has breast cancer, the poet struggles to live an examined life. Alienated and estranged from her own body, she turns her cancer into "these binoculars, / this new way of looking", and uses it as a way of fixing herself firmly within the moment.

  • av Noel Crook
    296,-

    Throughout Salt Moon, Noel Crook forges the kind of tragic vision Howard Nemerov described as the mark of our finest poets: drawing on myth and memory, Crook's fierce lyrics reveal a world that is at once "hopeless and beautiful... giving equal emphasis to both words."

  • av Jason Sommer
    296,-

    Near the beginning, just after the fall, was laughter—at least as Jason Sommer imagines it. In the title poem, Eve catches Adam's hilarity over what passes for a tree outside of Eden, their laughter a heady combination of longing, defiance, and perhaps even relief, through which they find they now possess "a knowledge of evil that is good”, an understanding that will carry them through life after paradise. Through settings mythical, historical and biblical, through characters that range from Gunga Din to St. Kevin of Glendalough, the poems in this book often search out meaning in the tracing of origins: of a bird's song, of laughter, of a word, of language itself. Poems explore the source of the word brouhaha, the song of the "resignation bird”, and the dangerous way a poem of Anna Akhmatova enters the world, under the eyes and ears of Stalin's secret police, escaping the house arrest its author must endure.In The Laughter of Adam and Eve, Sommer speaks from a multitude of voices and perspectives, in short, formal lyrics as well as longer free-verse narratives. From the archetypal parents of us all, down through anonymous voices, throughout these pages, women and men speak to—and of—each other, in many roles and relations—as lover and beloved, as child and parent, as dreamer and dreamt of. The poems attempt to travel beyond the traditional binary in search of the common thread that binds us to one another. Perhaps chief among them is story: whether recasting myth so that Pygmalion and Narcissus become a single figure or using an Appalachian tale retold as a message, lover to lover, these poems narrate, while engaging deeply with those special properties that poetry can bring to story.

  • av Jeffrey Skinner
    366,-

    This is Jeffrey Skinner's latest collection of poetry. At the centre of the book, the eighteen-part title poem "Glaciology" takes readers to the core of misunderstandings as it juxtaposes the work of a glaciologist with fractured language, misread cues, and a literalness that defies conventional explanation.

  • av Chad Davidson
    298,-

    From odes to the corporate cornucopia of Target and the aggressive cheer of a Carnival cruise, to emotive examinations of Caravaggio's ""The Calling of St Matthew"" or flies circling a putrescent bowl of forgotten fruit, this title presents a lyrical web of apocalyptic scenarios and snapshots of pop culture.

  • av Oliver de la Paz
    366,-

    A collection which examines the larger concepts of salvation and temptation in a world of blossoming strife, includes a series of aubades - dramatic poems culminating with the separation of lovers at dawn.

  • av Mary Jo Firth Gillett
    267,-

    Takes readers to a place of discovery, exploring issues of borders, familial and love relationships, and other aspects of being human.

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