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Some Glad Morning: Poems: Pitt Poetry Series

Autor Barbara Crooker
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 noi 2019
Longlist, 2019 Julie Suk Prize for best poetry book published by a literary press

Some Glad Morning, Barbara Crooker’s ninth book of poetry, teeters between joy and despair, faith and doubt, the disconnect between lived experience and the written word. Primarily a lyric poet, Crooker is in love with the beauty and mystery of the natural world, even as she recognizes its fragility. But she is also a poet unafraid to write about the consequences of our politics, the great divide. She writes as well about art, with ekphrastic poems on paintings by Hopper, O’Keeffe, Renoir, Matisse, Cézanne, and others. Many of the poems are elegaic in tone, an older writer tallying up her losses. Her work embodies Bruce Springsteen’s dictum, “it ain’t no sin to be glad we’re alive,” as she celebrates the explosion of spring peonies, chocolate mousse, a good martini, hummingbirds’ flashy metallics, the pewter light of September, Darryl Dawkins (late NBA star), saltine crackers.  While she recognizes it might all be about to slip away, “Remember that nothing is ever lost,” she writes, and somehow, we do.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822965923
ISBN-10: 0822965925
Pagini: 110
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.14 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Pittsburgh Press
Colecția University of Pittsburgh Press
Seria Pitt Poetry Series


Recenzii

“Barbara Crooker’s admiration and affection for visual art, as evidenced in numerous ekphrastic poems, is witnessed in the vividly descriptive—perhaps painterly—vocabulary she exhibits throughout Some Glad Morning. Indeed, she also frequently seems to ‘speak in the tongues of flowers’ with a lyrical language borrowed from elements of the physical world around her, especially when displaying human interaction with aspects of nature, food, music, and those others for whom we care and with whom we share these gifts. Consequently, Crooker’s colorfully textured and sensitively expressive poetry always offers delight to readers’ eyes and ears.” —Edward Byrne, editor, Valparaiso Poetry Review
 

“’Darkness / will not overtake us,’ insists Barbara Crooker, who writes poems of deep happiness. How untrendy! one might say. Where’s the political? Where’s grief? They’re here too, underpinning these poems, but not allowed governance. ‘O / day! You are the antidote / to the bitter news of the world.’ If we have only one life, better to enjoy each glad morning, and some evenings too: ‘So let me lean back in this red Adirondack / chair as dusk makes us all equal, happy for the blend / of herbs and gin, pure sapphire, the dividend of olive / at the end.’ Like Edward Hopper, one of the artists whose work Crooker inhabits in these pages, her ‘subject is light,’ interior as well as exterior, and the birds and trees and humans who revel in it.” —Michael Waters
 

“Barbara Crooker's poems invite us into her garden, into castles and museums, into the rich complexity of life. Using language full of passion and metaphor, Crooker paints each line, like an artist, with precision and beauty. She celebrates even the smallest moment showing us that time is slippery as a silver fish. Cheers to Crooker's dry martinis, to her wit and wisdom, to this remarkable collection.” —Carol Was, poetry editor, The MacGuffin
 

“Crooker gives us permission to take pleasure in the world even when we feel there is no time or energy for such luxuries as gratitude and joy.” —Christian Century
 
“Read Barbara Crooker’s Some Glad Morning and be blown away by her exuberant use of language.” —Assisi
 
“Crooker is a master at ekphrastic poetry, and this book includes several fine examples. . . . Readers will understand that Crooker has been in love—with life, with art, with nature, with her family, and with words—for her whole life, and our lives are the richer for it.” —Poetry Porch
 
Some Glad Morning is both a promise and a fulfillment: the ‘glad morning’ can be either now or in the past or future, but the notion encapsulates Barbara Crooker’s unique poetic mixture of longing and love.” —Valparaiso Poetry Review
 

Extras

SPARROWS
 
I never learned to tell one from another—
swamp, field, song, vesper—all scraps
of drab:  rust, dun, buff, tan.  Some streaky-breasted,
some not.  We hear the flutter of  wings, look up,
then yawn, ho hum, a sparrow.  No rush
for binoculars. Like the poor, they are always with us.
Look at them flick and flit in this dry meadow of foxtail,
switchgrass, goldenrod; every leaf, stem, and seedhead
burnished in the dying light.  Maybe they are the only angels
we get in this life.  But the very hairs on our head are numbered,
and the father knows them all by name. Each sparrow, too, has a song—
no flashy cardinal selling cheer, no sky-blue jay's ironic squawk,
no eponymous chicka-dee-dee-dee.  Just us, the unnoticed, gleaning
what others have left behind, and singing for all we're worth, teetering
on a bit of bracken at the edge of a wild field.
 

Descriere

A new collection from the award winning poet Barbara Crooker.