Planning My Escape: Poetry by Mary Jo Homstad
Autor Mary Jo Homstad Greg Brown Editat de Eric O. Hustvedten Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 noi 2020
A college classmate of Homstad's, who went on to become and English professor at their alma mater, says of Planning My Escape:
These poems are the work of a talented young poet whose life was cut short before that talent could be fully developed, a loss for us all. We should think of Keats and the Romantics. Like them, Mary saw a continuity between nature and self, or subjectivity, and used poetry to explore how the experience of one was formative of the other. In her poetry the spiritual inhabits the material world, and the struggle is joined between modern emptiness and the fullness of an open heart.
- Nicholas Eric Preus, emeritus professor of English, Luther College
Most of these 145 poems were previously collected in Weavings, published in 1980, shortly after the poet's death. A first print run of 600 copies led to a second edition. A dozen poems appear here in print for the first time.
"Mary thought of herself as a poet," according to her brother Carl. Planning My Escape is likely to make that opinion universal.
You are in for a lively ride.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780578762104
ISBN-10: 0578762102
Pagini: 142
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: Armour Books
ISBN-10: 0578762102
Pagini: 142
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: Armour Books
Notă biografică
Mary Jo Homstad was born on March 21, 1947. She died in an automobile accident on December 1, 1978 at the age of 31. The daughter of Dr. Joseph Homstad and Lucy Hanson, Mary grew up in Denver Colorado. In 1965 she enrolled at Luther College, Decorah, Iowa, and after graduation spent a year teaching English in Japan. She lived in rural Decorah. Mary had many jobs, but she always saw herself as a poet. She would fill small notebooks with thoughts, phrases, overheard dialogue, drafts of poems and quotations from her favorite writers. When she had accumulated several notebooks, she would transcribe and revise the thoughts and poems into a large hardbound volume. She had created several of these volumes when she died. In 1980 her mother Lucy Hanson Homstad, with the help of her brother Joe and editor Douglas Anderson, put together a book of poems and drawings from her journals called Weavings. The first print run of 600 copies led to a second edition.