Throwing the Diamond Hitch: Brave & Brilliant
Autor Emily Ursuliaken Limba Engleză Paperback – 3 mar 2017
Preț: 99.09 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 149
Preț estimativ în valută:
18.97€ • 19.72$ • 15.73£
18.97€ • 19.72$ • 15.73£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 17-31 ianuarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781552389225
ISBN-10: 1552389227
Pagini: 112
Ilustrații: 17 illus
Dimensiuni: 155 x 230 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: University of Calgary Press
Colecția University of Calgary Press (CA)
Seria Brave & Brilliant
ISBN-10: 1552389227
Pagini: 112
Ilustrații: 17 illus
Dimensiuni: 155 x 230 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.24 kg
Editura: University of Calgary Press
Colecția University of Calgary Press (CA)
Seria Brave & Brilliant
Recenzii
"Throwing the Diamond Hitch follows two young women on a rip-snorting adventure by antique roadster and horseback through the Rocky Mountains. Drawing on first-person accounts and photos preserved in Phyl and Annes co-written diary, Ursuliak constructs a poetic narrative of two astonishing women who smoke and drink their way through the mountains and who finish each others sentences. Ursuliaks confident debut shows her eye for detail and ear for language. Her poems turn cowboy culture on its head." -- Monica Kidd, author of "The Year of our Beautiful Exile"
"Throwing the Diamond Hitch is at once a play, a poetry book, a travel journal, a history, and a western. Knotting together these forms, Ursuliak uses the particularher grandmother and best friends 1951 trip by roadster and horsebackto tell a timeless story of young women who refuse to be tied down by convention. Tough, tender, well-crafted and funny, this book poignantly captures the spirit of adventurous womanhood." -- Joan Crate, author of "Black Apple"
"This is a stunning debut collection. Ursuliaks thoughtfully crafted lines and the dance of space and movement within her poems are impressive. Fragments of photos and handwritten notes draw the reader into a tightly woven poetic and narrative tapestry. This fresh voice calls for a quiet reading and a listening ear." -- Kim Fahner, 2016-2018 poet laureate for Sudbury, author of "The Narcoleptic Madonna"
"Emily Ursuliak's Throwing the Diamond Hitch offers an insightful and endearing literary testament of Phyllis and Anne's 1951 trip from the west coast to the Rockies and back again...The story ties together many seeming dichotomies: the mixture of poetry and prose, the factual accounts from the journal and literary interpretations, third man omniscience and first person accounts, and the triumph of Anne and Phyllis' individuality and the connection to the community they discover. This omnipresent layering leaves you longing to return to the story to unweave that hitch, but it is this literary knot that makes the work so intriguing in the first place." - Logon Pollon, Freefall, Volume XXVII Number 3 Fall 2017
"This cycle of poems had everything I wanted and more." - Megan Clark, Broken Pencil, Fall 2017 (54)
"Throwing the Diamond Hitch is at once a play, a poetry book, a travel journal, a history, and a western. Knotting together these forms, Ursuliak uses the particularher grandmother and best friends 1951 trip by roadster and horsebackto tell a timeless story of young women who refuse to be tied down by convention. Tough, tender, well-crafted and funny, this book poignantly captures the spirit of adventurous womanhood." -- Joan Crate, author of "Black Apple"
"This is a stunning debut collection. Ursuliaks thoughtfully crafted lines and the dance of space and movement within her poems are impressive. Fragments of photos and handwritten notes draw the reader into a tightly woven poetic and narrative tapestry. This fresh voice calls for a quiet reading and a listening ear." -- Kim Fahner, 2016-2018 poet laureate for Sudbury, author of "The Narcoleptic Madonna"
"Emily Ursuliak's Throwing the Diamond Hitch offers an insightful and endearing literary testament of Phyllis and Anne's 1951 trip from the west coast to the Rockies and back again...The story ties together many seeming dichotomies: the mixture of poetry and prose, the factual accounts from the journal and literary interpretations, third man omniscience and first person accounts, and the triumph of Anne and Phyllis' individuality and the connection to the community they discover. This omnipresent layering leaves you longing to return to the story to unweave that hitch, but it is this literary knot that makes the work so intriguing in the first place." - Logon Pollon, Freefall, Volume XXVII Number 3 Fall 2017
"This cycle of poems had everything I wanted and more." - Megan Clark, Broken Pencil, Fall 2017 (54)