Devil, Dear
Autor Mary Ann McFaddenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 3 dec 2014
"Devil, Dear teems with erotic life. These poems adore the world within us and outside us, embracing our hungers and imperfections alike."—Joan Larkin
Mary Ann McFadden's existential poems capture bizarre, sweet, and humorous moments oft unobserved. The poet explores the evolution of romantic relationships from lust-driven days to the blander ones found in lasting companionship. Devil, Dear takes us traveling near and far, examining comfort zones and boldly stepping beyond them. We face the disquietude of mortality with McFadden in fearlessness and wit.
From "That Year the Whales":
All that spring the shadows made a changing shape
n the neighbor's clapboard walls: like rows of ocean waves
where blisters from the summer sun began to swell
with a cetacean grace, and let their bellies roll.
I watched out my window while the slow months' weight,
that year the whales rose out of the green paint,
pressed like coal in my throat, until the whole year lit up,
and dove, and shrank itself to a minute.
Mary Ann McFadden is a poet who has just returned to the United States after fifteen years living in Mazatlan and in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. She won the Four Way Books Intro Prize in 1995 and Eye of the Blackbird was published in 1997. Her poems have shown up in Green Mountains Review, Bloom, Psychology Tomorrow, the Marlboro Review, Southern Poetry Review, the American Voice, Moving Out, and elsewhere. McFadden taught at Brooklyn College, CUNY, and gave workshops at The New York City Libraries and at the Biblioteca in San Miguel. In 2010 she was awarded a MacDowell Fellowship. She currently lives in Riverside, California.
Mary Ann McFadden's existential poems capture bizarre, sweet, and humorous moments oft unobserved. The poet explores the evolution of romantic relationships from lust-driven days to the blander ones found in lasting companionship. Devil, Dear takes us traveling near and far, examining comfort zones and boldly stepping beyond them. We face the disquietude of mortality with McFadden in fearlessness and wit.
From "That Year the Whales":
All that spring the shadows made a changing shape
n the neighbor's clapboard walls: like rows of ocean waves
where blisters from the summer sun began to swell
with a cetacean grace, and let their bellies roll.
I watched out my window while the slow months' weight,
that year the whales rose out of the green paint,
pressed like coal in my throat, until the whole year lit up,
and dove, and shrank itself to a minute.
Mary Ann McFadden is a poet who has just returned to the United States after fifteen years living in Mazatlan and in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. She won the Four Way Books Intro Prize in 1995 and Eye of the Blackbird was published in 1997. Her poems have shown up in Green Mountains Review, Bloom, Psychology Tomorrow, the Marlboro Review, Southern Poetry Review, the American Voice, Moving Out, and elsewhere. McFadden taught at Brooklyn College, CUNY, and gave workshops at The New York City Libraries and at the Biblioteca in San Miguel. In 2010 she was awarded a MacDowell Fellowship. She currently lives in Riverside, California.
Preț: 81.85 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 123
Preț estimativ în valută:
15.66€ • 16.16$ • 13.07£
15.66€ • 16.16$ • 13.07£
Carte indisponibilă temporar
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781938584084
ISBN-10: 1938584082
Pagini: 66
Dimensiuni: 160 x 211 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.14 kg
Editura: ALICE JAMES BOOKS
ISBN-10: 1938584082
Pagini: 66
Dimensiuni: 160 x 211 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.14 kg
Editura: ALICE JAMES BOOKS
Notă biografică
Mary Ann McFadden is a poet who has just returned to the U.S. after 15 years living in Mazatlan and in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. She won the Four Way Books Intro Prize in 1995 and Eye of the Blackbird was published in 1997. Her poems have shown up in Green Mountains Review, Bloom, Psychology Tomorrow, The Marlboro Review, Southern Poetry Review, The American Voice, Moving Out, and elsewhere. In 2005, several poems were set to music by the composer Gerald Busby and performed at The Carnegie Center, New York City. McFadden taught at Brooklyn College, CUNY, and gave workshops at The New York City Libraries, and at the Biblioteca in San Miguel. In 2010 she was awarded a MacDowell Fellowship. She currently lives in Riverside, California.
Descriere
From a deeply intimate space, Devil, Dear evokes rich and powerful revelations about human love, life, and interaction.