Incarnate Grace: Crab Orchard Series in Poetry
Autor Moira Linehanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 mar 2015
In her collection Incarnate Grace, 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. As she travels Ireland and the Pacific Northwest, her busy mind moves from the knot in her breast to the knots in her knitting to the illuminated knots of The Book of Kells to the tossing, knotted surface of the sea; from the margins of her surgery—clean but not ideal—to the margins of illuminated manuscripts. She links the mundane to the mythic, intertwining connections between scripture and nature, storms and loss, winter and light, breast cancer and embroidery. As she returns to her home on a small pond in Massachusetts, she takes with her the fruits of her travels: the incarnate grace of the ordinary.
Vivid and compelling, Incarnate Grace finds beauty in the worst of circumstances and redemption in the fabric of daily life.
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. As she travels Ireland and the Pacific Northwest, her busy mind moves from the knot in her breast to the knots in her knitting to the illuminated knots of The Book of Kells to the tossing, knotted surface of the sea; from the margins of her surgery—clean but not ideal—to the margins of illuminated manuscripts. She links the mundane to the mythic, intertwining connections between scripture and nature, storms and loss, winter and light, breast cancer and embroidery. As she returns to her home on a small pond in Massachusetts, she takes with her the fruits of her travels: the incarnate grace of the ordinary.
Vivid and compelling, Incarnate Grace finds beauty in the worst of circumstances and redemption in the fabric of daily life.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780809333899
ISBN-10: 0809333899
Pagini: 88
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Ediția:1st Edition
Editura: Southern Illinois University Press
Colecția Southern Illinois University Press
Seria Crab Orchard Series in Poetry
ISBN-10: 0809333899
Pagini: 88
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Ediția:1st Edition
Editura: Southern Illinois University Press
Colecția Southern Illinois University Press
Seria Crab Orchard Series in Poetry
Notă biografică
Moira Linehan is the author of If No Moon, winner of the 2006 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Open Competition and an Honor Book in Poetry in the 2008 Massachusetts Book Awards. Her poetry has appeared in America, Crab Orchard Review, Greensboro Review, Notre Dame Review, Poetry East, Quiddity, Salamander, Southwest Review, Image, Prairie Schooner, and many others.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
I
Praise Him in the Temple of the Present
No Say
Winter Pond
Approaching 60
Naming It
Balling Yarn
Scraping the Blackened Bottom
In the Keep of the Body
Electric
Healing
Late Prayer
Against the Slow-Falling Snow
Marginal
The Plumber Said
That Moment
Halfway through Radiation
Calling
Wild Swans at Winter Pond
II
[the way you used to enter]
Learning to Travel
The Pacific Madrone
The Habits of California Quails
Birding Trip, Early February, Southwest British Columbia
Breast Cancer 180
Ferry
viii
Sounding It Out
Knitting at Annaghmakerrig
The Monks Who Made The Book of Kells
The Art of Manuscript Illumination
The Theology of Manuscript Illumination
Crossing Over
Cill Rialaig Elemental
L’Heure Bleue at Ballinskelligs Bay
Journey to Skellig Michael
To Elijah, at Ballinskelligs
The Sea Here, Teaching Me,
III
Brushes
Japanese Wall Hanging
The Space Between
Predestination
Vocation
At Sainte-Chapelle
Forty Years Ago
Waiting Room
Woman Ironing
Knitting Lace
For the Men Who Fish along Horn Pond
Our Nature
On Notice
My Great Blue
For the One Who Still Lives inside Me—
Winged Woman Walking,
After the Storm
Last Wishes
A Deep Wound
Notes
I
Praise Him in the Temple of the Present
No Say
Winter Pond
Approaching 60
Naming It
Balling Yarn
Scraping the Blackened Bottom
In the Keep of the Body
Electric
Healing
Late Prayer
Against the Slow-Falling Snow
Marginal
The Plumber Said
That Moment
Halfway through Radiation
Calling
Wild Swans at Winter Pond
II
[the way you used to enter]
Learning to Travel
The Pacific Madrone
The Habits of California Quails
Birding Trip, Early February, Southwest British Columbia
Breast Cancer 180
Ferry
viii
Sounding It Out
Knitting at Annaghmakerrig
The Monks Who Made The Book of Kells
The Art of Manuscript Illumination
The Theology of Manuscript Illumination
Crossing Over
Cill Rialaig Elemental
L’Heure Bleue at Ballinskelligs Bay
Journey to Skellig Michael
To Elijah, at Ballinskelligs
The Sea Here, Teaching Me,
III
Brushes
Japanese Wall Hanging
The Space Between
Predestination
Vocation
At Sainte-Chapelle
Forty Years Ago
Waiting Room
Woman Ironing
Knitting Lace
For the Men Who Fish along Horn Pond
Our Nature
On Notice
My Great Blue
For the One Who Still Lives inside Me—
Winged Woman Walking,
After the Storm
Last Wishes
A Deep Wound
Notes
Recenzii
“Although illness is at the heart of Moira Linehan’s fine new collection, the overriding sense left by these poems is of an eager imagination at full tilt, transmitting through grounded yet buoyant language a moving sense of what it’s like to live in a world of shadows and yet continue to reach for the light. Here is a poet wide awake to the perpetually shifting character of the world—a world containing nature, art, and the human dilemmas forged by sickness or simply by time.While illness alerts her mind and sharpens her voice, Linehan confronts her hard facts as well as her deeply observed, fully suffered, loved world without flinching—converting all (an episode of radiation, a work of Japanese art, an Irish or an American landscape) into her own quickened language of scrupulous attention.”—Eamon Grennan
“I must be satisfied with my heart, wrote the aging Yeats, who well understood this vow to be a fraught and even terrifying one. Moira Linehan writes of transience and mortality with a Yeatsian delicacy and a Yeatsian ferocity. And in response to the imperiling mysteries of cancer and aging, she offers lyrics of hard-won insight, clarity, and astonishment. The nervy purpose of these poems is to celebrate, as she puts it in one poem, ‘this body, here for the inevitable / disappearing and . . . soothing / a throat left raw by the unspeakable.’ This is a superbly crafted book by a wise and fearless maker.”—David Wojahn
“From a place of illness and ‘no say’ to an incredibly rich music, Moira Linehan takes us on a journey, a pilgrimage, in fact, as these fine poems move through restorative landscapes, both outer—New England, the Pacific Northwest, Ireland—and inner, that place ‘so far it’s the only place left.’ What emerges is indeed a vision of grace. Linehan’s fine-tuned eye gives us the natural world in stunning detail, and the glimmer of something beyond. Her language is rich and palpable, able to catch what is always just slipping away and stitch it into something that holds. Incarnate Grace is a book to cherish.”—Betsy Sholl
“If you’ve had breast cancer, breathing while reading these holy poems is difficult, sometimes impossible. If you’re a poet, their breath inflates your lungs with pure pleasure. If you love brilliant poems, you’re a reader. Please read this book!”—Hilda Raz
“I must be satisfied with my heart, wrote the aging Yeats, who well understood this vow to be a fraught and even terrifying one. Moira Linehan writes of transience and mortality with a Yeatsian delicacy and a Yeatsian ferocity. And in response to the imperiling mysteries of cancer and aging, she offers lyrics of hard-won insight, clarity, and astonishment. The nervy purpose of these poems is to celebrate, as she puts it in one poem, ‘this body, here for the inevitable / disappearing and . . . soothing / a throat left raw by the unspeakable.’ This is a superbly crafted book by a wise and fearless maker.”—David Wojahn
“From a place of illness and ‘no say’ to an incredibly rich music, Moira Linehan takes us on a journey, a pilgrimage, in fact, as these fine poems move through restorative landscapes, both outer—New England, the Pacific Northwest, Ireland—and inner, that place ‘so far it’s the only place left.’ What emerges is indeed a vision of grace. Linehan’s fine-tuned eye gives us the natural world in stunning detail, and the glimmer of something beyond. Her language is rich and palpable, able to catch what is always just slipping away and stitch it into something that holds. Incarnate Grace is a book to cherish.”—Betsy Sholl
“If you’ve had breast cancer, breathing while reading these holy poems is difficult, sometimes impossible. If you’re a poet, their breath inflates your lungs with pure pleasure. If you love brilliant poems, you’re a reader. Please read this book!”—Hilda Raz
Descriere
In Incarnate Grace, poet Moira Linehan explores, questions, and ultimately celebrates her attempt to live in the present after learning she has breast cancer. Vivid and compelling, Incarnate Grace finds beauty in the worst of circumstances and redemption in the fabric of daily life.