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Slow Trains Overhead: Chicago Poems and Stories

Autor Reginald Gibbons
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 apr 2017
Few people writing today could successfully combine an intimate knowledge of Chicago with a poet’s eye, and capture what it’s really like to live in this remarkable city. Embracing a striking variety of human experience—a chance encounter with a veteran on Belmont Avenue, the grimy majesty of the downtown El tracks, domestic violence in a North Side brownstone, the wide-eyed wonder of new arrivals at O’Hare, and much more—these new and selected poems and stories by Reginald Gibbons celebrate the heady mix of elation and despair that is city life. With Slow Trains Overhead, he has rendered a living portrait of Chicago as luminously detailed and powerful as those of Nelson Algren and Carl Sandburg.
Gibbons takes the reader from museums and neighborhood life to tense proceedings in Juvenile Court, from comically noir-tinged scenes at a store on Clark Street to midnight immigrants at a gas station on Western Avenue, and from a child's piggybank to nature in urban spaces. For Gibbons, the city’s people, places, and historical reverberations are a compelling human array of the everyday and the extraordinary, of poverty and beauty, of the experience of being one among many. Penned by one of its most prominent writers, Slow Trains Overhead evokes and commemorates human life in a great city.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226478845
ISBN-10: 022647884X
Pagini: 120
Ilustrații: 3 halftones
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.15 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press

Notă biografică

Reginald Gibbons is a poet, fiction writer, translator, and essayist. At Northwestern University, he is professor of English and classics, director of the Center for the Writing Arts, and codirector of the MA/MFA Program in Creative Writing. His most recent poetry collection, Creatures of a Day, was a finalist for the 2008 National Book Award.

Cuprins

Acknowledgments


Adams & Wabash
A Meeting
Five Pears or Peaches
Ode: Citizens
Avian Time
Elsewhere Children
A Car
Milwaukee & Division
Small Business
Forsaken in the City
A Large Heavy-Faced Woman, Pocked, Unkempt, in a Loose Dress
Admiration
A Leap
II 
Mekong Restaurant
City
Wonder
Ode: At a Twenty-Four-Hour Gas Station
Enough
The Vanishing Point
Just Imagine
On Sad Suburban Afternoons of Autumn
Broadway & Argyle
Slow Motion
Sparrow
An Aching Young Man
Oh
Boy on a Busy Corner
III 
A Man in a Suit
Hungry Man Raids Supermarket
The Blue Dress
The Affect of Elms
Red Line Howard / 95th
Mission
Rich Pale Pink
Friday Snow
Nonna
State & Wacker
On Belmont
Christmas
Celebration
No Matter What Has Happened This May

Recenzii

“This is some of the most beautiful writing I've encountered in a long time. With Reginald Gibbons as our guide, we find ourselves in the nooks and crannies of Chicago, in garages, on street corners, in apartment buildings, and in the city’s neglected institutions like juvenile court. In this stunning collection of prose and poetry, Gibbons captures intimate and poignant stories that have as their backdrop this large, anonymous metropolis. Anyone who has an investment in the urban experience will find themselves drawn to Slow Trains Overhead.”

“The poems and stories in Reginald Gibbons’s Slow Trains Overhead are a constantly surprising tour through the loveliness and desperation of Chicago. By their attentive listening, they pay homage to the city’s uncountable souls wherever they are to be found—on the map, on the street, at home, in the solitary mind’s eye. This is a necessary, enlivening book by a keen observer with an open spirit who makes impassioned music out of the most ordinary encounters, without cynicism or sentimentality.”

Slow Trains Overhead is a book of incessant crossings and intersections. Reginald Gibbons’s formidable trains resist expedient arrivals as much as they insist on fresh departures—from the present into ‘history,’ our everyday into ‘a different life,’ the elevated tracks and blind alleys of Chicago into the world. These are poems—and prose—that I’m convinced Nelson Algren and James T. Farrell would have loved—and James Joyce, Baudelaire, and Chekhov, too.”

"[Gibbons] chronicles the beautiful chaos of his adopted hometown, its furious pace and its powerful history, a history tucked into the creases between the great buildings like a love note left in a school locker."