Humanities  /  Poetry
Pieces of Air in the Epic Cover Pieces of Air in the Epic Cover
Format: 
Pages: 104
ISBN: 9780819567871
Pub Date: 26 Oct 2005
Pages: 104
ISBN: 9780819567888
Pub Date: 01 Aug 2007
Description:
In her newest poems, Brenda Hillman continues her exploration of nature and culture in ways that demonstrate her original place in experimental lyric traditions. Pieces of Air in the Epic is the second book of a tetrology that takes the elements-earth, air, water, fire-as its subject. As Hillman's previous collection, Cascadia, explores "earth," the present collection considers "air"-the many meanings of the word and the life-giving medium we breathe-to test a reality that is both political and personal.
Eye of Water Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 96
ISBN: 9780822958932
Pub Date: 15 Oct 2005
Description:
Winner of the 2004 Cave Canem Poetry PrizeThe poems in Eye of Water are derived from the narrator’s experiences in what she calls her “waking.” She traces inspiration to “the beginning of myth, to Eve in the Garden of Eden” and states: “We could spend our lives unraveling the mistake and discover that life was one great big ‘chore,’ and inescapable. And the path is full of missteps and accidents because we cannot (or prefer not to) remember all that got us to that moment.
Blue on Blue Ground Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 96
ISBN: 9780822958888
Pub Date: 26 Sep 2005
Description:
Winner of the 2004 Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry PrizeBlue on Blue Ground is about the body, desire, anxiety, and obsession—how what we want redeems and isolates us (and is sometimes used against us). These poems are artful yet accessible, lyrical yet direct, strange but recognizable.Smith’s relentless self-examination, fear, sense of humor, and vulnerability are all laid to bare in crisp, precise language.
Improbable Swervings of Atoms, The Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 104
ISBN: 9780822958895
Pub Date: 20 Aug 2005
Description:
Winner of the 2004 Donald Hall Prize in PoetryThe Improbable Swervings of Atoms follows the comedic, often painful, physical and emotional travails of a young boy growing up in 1950s America. He watches the McCarthy hearings, conquers the Congo, assassinates the president, has his head stuffed into a toilet, drops his uniform on the fifty-yard line, and tries to make sense of Lucretius’s De Rerum Natura. The poems engage history in a very intimate way, revealing how a boy, as he matures, attempts to understand the world around him, his own physical development, the people in his life, and what it means to live in a country and time where it is impossible to disengage oneself from world events—where, in fact, the quest for identity is an act that requires one to rewrite history in personal terms.
The Real Enough World Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780819567512
Pub Date: 15 Aug 2005
Description:
The Real Enough World speculates about the invention of self and world in the act of writing poems. Like orchestral movements, the poems vary in tonal qualities and speed, moving from sensibility-driven, antic poems through a deeply personal series of narratives to poems of philosophical reflection where landscape and love operate as tropes for each other. Underlying the whole is the poet's sense that the material of life, as well as language, is insoluble and impermanent-humorous, tragic, absurd, joyous.
Continued Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 144
ISBN: 9780819567680
Pub Date: 15 May 2005
Description:
Continued is a selection of poems by Piotr Sommer, spanning his career to date. A kind of poetic utterance, these "talk poems" are devoid of any singsong quality yet faithfully preserve all the melodies and rhythms of colloquial speech. Events and objects of ordinary, everyday life are related and described by the speaker in a deliberately deadpan manner.
90 Miles Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 114
ISBN: 9780822958802
Pub Date: 23 Mar 2005
Description:
Ninety miles separate Cuba and Key West, Florida. Crossing that distance, thousands of Cubans have lost their lives. For Cuban American poet Virgil Su\u00e1rez, that expanse of ocean represents the state of exile, which he has imaginatively bridged in over two decades of compelling poetry.
No Heaven Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 144
ISBN: 9780822958758
Pub Date: 15 Mar 2005
Description:
Alicia Suskin Ostriker's voice has long been acknowledged as a major force in American poetry. In No Heaven, her eleventh collection, she takes a hint from John Lennon's \u0022Imagine\u0022 to wrestle with the world as it is: \u0022no hell below us, / above us only sky.\u0022 It is a world of cities, including New York, London, Jerusalem, and Berlin, where the poet can celebrate pickup basketball, peace marches, and the energy of graffiti.
Flying At Night Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 152
ISBN: 9780822958772
Pub Date: 11 Mar 2005
Description:
Named U.S. Poet Laureate for 2004-2006, Ted Kooser is one of America's masters of the short metaphorical poem.
From the Mountain, From the Valley Cover

From the Mountain, From the Valley

New and Collected Poems
Format: 
Pages: 176
ISBN: 9780813121994
Pub Date: 01 Mar 2005
Pages: 176
ISBN: 9780813191324
Pub Date: 01 Mar 2005
Description:
James Still first achieved national recognition in the 1930s as a poet. Although he is better known today as a writer of fiction, it is his poetry that many of his essential images, such as the "mighty river of earth," first found expression. Yet much of his poetry remains out of print or difficult to find.
Two And Two Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 126
ISBN: 9780822958710
Pub Date: 08 Feb 2005
Description:
Denise Duhamel's much anticipated new collection begins with a revisionist tale--Noah is married to Joan of Arc--in a poem about America's often flawed sense of history. Throughout Two and Two, doubles abound: Noah's animals; Duhamel's parents as Jack and Jill in a near-fatal accident; an incestuous double sestina; a male/female pantoum; a dream and its interpretation; and translations of advertisements from English to Spanish. In two M\u00f6bius strip poems (shaped like the Twin Towers), Duhamel invites her readers to get out their scissors and tape and transform her poems into 3-D objects.
Elegy On Toy Piano Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 90
ISBN: 9780822958727
Pub Date: 28 Jan 2005
Description:
In Elegy on Toy Piano, Dean Young's sixth book of poems, elegiac necessity finds itself next to goofy celebration. Daffy Duck enters the Valley of the Eternals. Faulkner and bell-bottoms cling to beauty's evanescence.
The Collected Poems and Journals of Mary Tighe Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 384
ISBN: 9780813123431
Pub Date: 14 Jan 2005
Description:
Mary Blachford Tighe was born in Dublin in 1772 and became a poet by the age of seventeen. Her enormously popular 1805 epic poem "Psyche; or, The Legend of Love" made her a fixture of English literary history for much of the nineteenth century. For much of the twentieth century, however, Tighe was better known for her influence on Keats's poetry than the considerable merits of her own work.
Eyeshot Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
ISBN: 9780819566720
Pub Date: 29 Dec 2004
Illustrations: 3 illus.
Description:
Heather McHugh's new book, Eyeshot, is a brooding, visionary work that takes aim at the big questions-those of love and death. The poems suggest that such immensities balance on the smallest details, and that a range of human blindness is inescapable. The power of this new work comes from its delicate yet tenacious fidelity to the ever-unfolding senses of sense.
Babel Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 88
ISBN: 9780822958598
Pub Date: 07 Nov 2004
Description:
Babel features more of the rhetorical acrobatics that fueled Barbara Hamby's earlier work. These whirlwinds of words and sounds form vistas, images, and scenes that are at once unique and immediately recognizable.In poems such as “Six, Sex, Say,” she displays a linguistic bravado that moves effortlessly through translations, cognates, and homonyms.
The Last Clear Narrative Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 120
ISBN: 9780819567116
Pub Date: 25 Oct 2004
Description:
In her second collection of poems, Rachel Zucker returns to a more autobiographical stance and writes about the particulars of marriage, pregnancy, childbirth, and motherhood-experiences that radically surprised her. But this is no simple reportage. With candor, humor, and compassion, Zucker discovers a new poetic territory: a landscape between story and fragment, a way of telling that is neither confessional nor intellectually detached.