Cena: |
Želi ovaj predmet: | 1 |
Stanje: | Polovan bez oštećenja |
Garancija: | Ne |
Isporuka: | Pošta Lično preuzimanje |
Plaćanje: | Tekući račun (pre slanja) Lično |
Grad: |
Novi Sad, Novi Sad |
Godina izdanja: 2008
ISBN: 978-0-8071-3318-7
Jezik: Engleski
Autor: Strani
Creatures of a Day: Poems Paperback – 30 Mar. 2008
by Reginald Gibbons (Author) (Author)
Product details
Publisher: LSU Press (30 Mar. 2008)
Language: English
Paperback: 75 pages
Dimensions: 15.2 x 0.54 x 22.9 cm
In Creatures of a Day, Reginald Gibbons presents intense encounters with everyday people amidst the historical and social contexts of everyday life. His poems are meditations on memory, obligation, love, death, celebration, and sorrow. Some of them show how the making of poetry itself seems inextricably enmeshed with personal encounter and with history. This new collection includes five odes woven from interactions with others, thirteen shorter poems, and `Fern-Texts,` a kind of biographical and autobiographical essay in syllabic verse on the parallel decades of the English 1790s and the American 1960s. Using quotations from the notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, `Fern-Texts` interweaves the dilemmas of love, ethics, and political engagement in Coleridge`s life when he was in his twenties and in the poet`s own life when, at the same age, he lived in California.
Ranging from poems of witness to paradoxical speculations, from the personal intimacy of love and death to the broad scope of historical turmoil, Creatures of a Day is an unusual, powerful collection.
Product description
Review
In the last few years Gibbons has written some of the best poems in America--big, rich, meticulous, thoughtful canvases, social landscapes with personal and metaphysical shadows. . . . Creatures of a Day addresses `this incomprehensible country` at our incomprehensible moment and these brilliant and humble poems are as alive with consciousness, as satisfying as anything I know.--Tony Hoagland
In these lines I hear the subtle, anguished voice of praise, stripping away what holds us from our common humanity, revealing the tenderness we need to survive. Surely Gibbons is Whitman`s heir, and in this profoundly democratic poetry, there is an incandescent clarity of perception, a focus on our changing, migrant lives. This is a poet who shows us how to dwell in the world.--Meena Alexander
About the Author
Reginald Gibbons is the author of seven previous volumes of poetry, translations of Spanish and Mexican poetry and ancient Greek tragedy, a short story collection, and a novel, and he served as editor of TriQuarterly from 1981 to 1997. He has won the O. B. Hardison Jr. Poetry Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, and other honors. A native of Texas, he now lives in Evanston, Illinois, where he is a professor of English and classics at Northwestern University.
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