Humanities  /  Poetry
Afterrimages Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 115
ISBN: 9780819512239
Pub Date: 01 Mar 1995
Description:
Joan Retallack offers a book of forms, like the medieval Book of Hours, intended to draw readers into a meditative experience of time, space, language, the many humors of chance and design, as they intersect and leave their traces on the page. All of civilization to date, all of history is after all aftermath, afterthought, afterimage. The language graphics of AFTERRIMAGES lay claim to the fragility-the gift, the terror, and the whimsy-of the remnant that all images are.
Simplicity Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 128
ISBN: 9780963818317
Pub Date: 31 Jan 1995
Description:
Expansive, lyrical, and groundbreaking poetry by Ruth Stone, winner of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award
Mose Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 66
ISBN: 9780819512208
Pub Date: 27 Jan 1995
Description:
A striking interplay of content and style makes this book-length narrative poem a wrenching, compelling tale. Mose is incarcerated in a Texas prison for a crime whose circumstances slowly unfold as he numbers the days of his sentence and fantasizes about a woman inexorably tied to his fate. As the harshness of prison life begins to close in and distort Mose's consciousness, he is increasingly obsessed with the truth of what happened.
Some Are Drowning Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 88
ISBN: 9780822955474
Pub Date: 06 Jan 1995
Description:
This first collection of poems enacts the struggle of a young black gay man in his search for identity. Many voices haunt these poems: black and white, male and female, the oppressor’s voice as well as the oppressed. The poet’s aim, finally, is to rescue some portion of the drowned and the drowning.
School Figures Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 128
ISBN: 9780822955177
Pub Date: 22 Nov 1994
Description:
In choosing Cathy Song’s first book for the Yale Series of Younger Poets, Richard Hugo said that her poems are “bouquets to those moments in life that seemed minor but in retrospect count the most.”In this, Song’s third book, the poems are like the school figures an ice skater etches onto the ice - the pen moving silently and deliberately across a white expanse of paper and experience, bringing maximum pressure to bear upon the blade of language to unlock “the invisible fire beneath the ice.”
Beautiful Shirt Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 67
ISBN: 9780819512192
Pub Date: 01 Nov 1994
Description:
The world that Donald Revell ponders in these poems replete with contrarieties. The same verbal playfulness and prophetic lyricism that made Revell a 1992 Guggenheim Fellow in Poetry and a winner of National Poetry Series, Pushcart, and PEN Center USA West awards are in full force in Beautiful Shirt. Here he traverses the rocky terrain of innocence, memory, disillusion, and salvation in a voice at once haunted and elliptical: "This is the world as I have known it.
Late Empire Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 88
ISBN: 9780822955306
Pub Date: 25 Oct 1994
Description:
Late Empire, David Wojahn’s most wide-ranging collection of poetry, affirms his status as one of the most compelling and original voices of his generation. In these poems, private history and public history mingle and merge in a way that is by turns deeply personal and elegiac. Centered around tow masterful elegies for the writers parents, the poems also treat an array of subjects familiar to us from news events but rarely examined by contemporary poetry.
Weather Central Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 104
ISBN: 9780822955276
Pub Date: 27 Sep 1994
Description:
Ted Kooser’s third book in the Pitt Poetry Series is a selection of poems published in literary journals over a ten year period by a writer whose work has been praised for its clarity and accessiblity, its mastery of figurative language, and its warmth and charm.
Hinge & Sign Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 237
ISBN: 9780819512161
Pub Date: 09 May 1994
Description:
A renowned poet’s artful collection is a striking body of work
Children Of Paradise Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780822955023
Pub Date: 19 Apr 1994
Description:
A book of poems about “children” in the widest sense--from children of the Nazi-torn Warsaw ghettos to the American poor, as well as poems of domesticity, love, and daily life.

The Whole Motion

Format: Paperback
Pages: 494
ISBN: 9780819512185
Pub Date: 01 Mar 1994
Description:
For over three decades, James Dickey has been one of the nation's most important poets and a prominent man of letters. The Whole Motion collects his poetic oeuvre into a single volume: 235 poems from his first book, Into the Stone (1960), to The Eagle's Mile (1990), along with previously uncollected poems and unpublished "apprentice" works.
New World, The Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 160
ISBN: 9780822955160
Pub Date: 08 Feb 1994
Description:
“A great poem of this end of our century. It is masterfully structured in recurring themes and voices which build on and off each other. Gardinier is above all a poet whose language and images are completely integrated so that in Keats's words, every rift is laden with ore.

The Wesleyan Tradition

Format: Paperback
Pages: 316
ISBN: 9780819512291
Pub Date: 28 Jan 1994
Description:
Since issuing its first volumes in 1959, the Wesleyan poetry program has challenged the reigning aesthetic of the time and profoundly influenced the development of American poetry. One of the country's oldest programs, its greatest achievement has been the publication of early works by yet undiscovered poetry who have since become major awarded Pulitzer and Bollingen prizes, National Book Awards, and many other honors. At a time when other programs are being phased out, Wesleyan takes this opportunity to celebrate its distinguished history and reaffirm its commitment to poetry with publication of The Wesleyan Tradition.
Against the Evidence Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 196
ISBN: 9780819512147
Pub Date: 01 Jan 1994
Description:
For over half a century, David Ignatow has crafted spare, plain, haunting poetry pf working life, urban images, and dark humor. The poetic heir of Whitman and William Carlos Williams, Ignatow is characteristically concerned with human mortality and human alienation in the world: the world as it is, defined by suffering and despair, yet at crucial times redeemed by cosmic vision and shared lives. His development as a poet is chronicled in Against the Evidence, title of the poem in part quoted above and meant by Ignatow as the metaphor for the whole body of his work.
Deeds of Utmost Kindness Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 86
ISBN: 9780819512123
Pub Date: 01 Jan 1994
Description:
A haunting and peculiar travelogue, Deeds of the Utmost Kindness employs forms as diverse as haiku and prose poetry in settings that range from Japan to the rural Ozarks to contemporary Moscow. The compelling strangeness of the poems' precise details exposes varied rhythms of thought and illustrated how different logics work in the metaphoric structures of changing places . Yet behind the uneasy sense of dislocation felt by the constant traveler lies the personal, essentially moral, voice of the poet as observer.
Bright Existence Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 112
ISBN: 9780819512079
Pub Date: 01 Oct 1993
Description:
The poems in Brenda Hillman's new collection, a companion volume to her recent Death Tratates, offer a dynamic vision of a universe founded on the tensions between light and dark , existence and non-existence, male and female, spirit and matter. Informed in part by Gnostic concepts of the separate soul in search of its divine origins ("spirit held by matter"). This dualistic vision is cast in contemporary terms and seeks resolution of these tensions through acceptance.