There It Is: New and Selected Poems
Autor Michael Caseyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 mai 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780931507427
ISBN-10: 0931507421
Pagini: 162
Dimensiuni: 155 x 230 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Loom Press
Colecția Loom Press
ISBN-10: 0931507421
Pagini: 162
Dimensiuni: 155 x 230 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Loom Press
Colecția Loom Press
Recenzii
I
first
heard
Michael
Casey
read
these
poems
on
a
July
evening
in
New
Hampshire
long
ago
while
the
war
in
Vietnam
was
still
a
tremendous
confusion
and
sorrow
for
all
of
us
and
the
poems
made
sense
of
it
in
a
new
way.
My
writer
father
had
discovered
that
our
summer
neighbor
was
a
poet
and
had
invited
him
to
read
to
us.
I
was
stunned
by
the
power
of
the
language,
the
great-heartedness
of
the
poems,
the
way
Casey
was
not
afraid
to
write
about
how
men
act
under
pressure,
the
way
he
used
ordinary
words
to
describe
extraordinary
feelings.
Now
I
read
the
poems
in
a
New
York
City
apartment
in
a
time
that
seems
as
confusing
as
the
1970s.
Michael
Caseys
poems
changed
as
he
went
back
to
work
after
the
war
and
later
when
he
moved
north,
but
their
power
is
undiminished.
He
is
tough
but
the
poems
are
tender.
These
are
poems
that
grab
you
by
the
heart
and
refuse
to
let
you
go.
Read
them!
Susan
Cheever,
author
of
Drinking
in
America:
Our
Secret
History
and
E.E.
Cummings:
A
Life
These are wonderfully droll, deadpan poems, like slyly condensed short stories, with an eye for the tellingly absurd detail and an ear for the oddities of everyday speech. Michael Foley, author of The Age of Absurdity and Isnt This Fun: Investigating the Serious Business of Enjoying Ourselves"
If Robert Frost was a poet of the rural New Englander, Michael Casey, also a New Englander, brings to life his mill town background, the guys who didn't go on to college and the larger world, but married the girls they dated in high school and got jobs in the mill. When he's sent to Vietnam he captures his fellow soldiers in their own military jargon. A master of the vernacular, he forces one to question writing in the 'correct' language when so many of us speak it quite differently, the language we think and feel in. Rare among poets, he's willing to explore colloquial speech in all its messiness, and gets it down perfectly -- in fact, he's got us all down spot on. This collection, with its wide range of voices, is a unique achievement. -- Edward Field, author of The Man Who Would Marry Susan Sontag and After the Fall: Poems Old and New
These are wonderfully droll, deadpan poems, like slyly condensed short stories, with an eye for the tellingly absurd detail and an ear for the oddities of everyday speech. Michael Foley, author of The Age of Absurdity and Isnt This Fun: Investigating the Serious Business of Enjoying Ourselves"
If Robert Frost was a poet of the rural New Englander, Michael Casey, also a New Englander, brings to life his mill town background, the guys who didn't go on to college and the larger world, but married the girls they dated in high school and got jobs in the mill. When he's sent to Vietnam he captures his fellow soldiers in their own military jargon. A master of the vernacular, he forces one to question writing in the 'correct' language when so many of us speak it quite differently, the language we think and feel in. Rare among poets, he's willing to explore colloquial speech in all its messiness, and gets it down perfectly -- in fact, he's got us all down spot on. This collection, with its wide range of voices, is a unique achievement. -- Edward Field, author of The Man Who Would Marry Susan Sontag and After the Fall: Poems Old and New