Wonderama: Poems
Autor Catherine Dotyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 mar 2021
Wonderama is a collection of cinematic, surprising, and at times harrowing poems that capture 1960s Paterson, New Jersey, as experienced by the poorest, most vulnerable children living there. With candor, ferocity, and stunning imagery, Catherine Doty’s poems explore survival and loss in the life of a young girl escaping the perils of want, neglect, and abuse. At times both heartbreaking and vaudevillian, Doty’s work chronicles sexual awakening and assault, alcoholism, the hazards of Catholic school, and the complex consequences of coming of age in the inner city.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781933880822
ISBN-10: 1933880821
Pagini: 72
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.14 kg
Editura: CavanKerry Press
Colecția CavanKerry Press
ISBN-10: 1933880821
Pagini: 72
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.14 kg
Editura: CavanKerry Press
Colecția CavanKerry Press
Notă biografică
Catherine Doty is a poet, cartoonist, and educator from Paterson, New Jersey. She is the author of momentum, also published by CavanKerry Press, and Just Kidding, a collection of cartoons.
Cuprins
I
Breathing Under Water
For Thomas Mosby
Sweet Ants
Tumbled
Grandma
The First Time I Was Told to Fuck Myself
Wonderama
The Dawn of Beauty
Behind Bars
II
What Does Not Kill Us
Half Day Kindergarten
Mikado, 1960
Catching
Gnomon
Standing, 1964
Touch
EZ Bake
Larval
Migraine
Dirt Cellar
Riding the Maniac
III
Flag
Switch
Gorillas
At the Circus
Salesman
Federal Sweets and Biscuit, l962
Shaman
IV
Dusk
New Girl in Town
Franny Takes Advice
Franny of the Jungle
Condemned
Hitter
V
Seaside Heights, 1964
Fun
Here, Boy
Sixteen, in the One Room That Locks
On Valley Road
Working Girls
JC and Me in the Summer of 64
Breathing Under Water
For Thomas Mosby
Sweet Ants
Tumbled
Grandma
The First Time I Was Told to Fuck Myself
Wonderama
The Dawn of Beauty
Behind Bars
II
What Does Not Kill Us
Half Day Kindergarten
Mikado, 1960
Catching
Gnomon
Standing, 1964
Touch
EZ Bake
Larval
Migraine
Dirt Cellar
Riding the Maniac
III
Flag
Switch
Gorillas
At the Circus
Salesman
Federal Sweets and Biscuit, l962
Shaman
IV
Dusk
New Girl in Town
Franny Takes Advice
Franny of the Jungle
Condemned
Hitter
V
Seaside Heights, 1964
Fun
Here, Boy
Sixteen, in the One Room That Locks
On Valley Road
Working Girls
JC and Me in the Summer of 64
Recenzii
“In Catherine Doty’s poetry the lyric gift and the comic gift are so finely interfused that you can turn a poem inside out and not expose a single seam. Over and over in her poems, these two rarest of gifts react, and produce the mysterious virtue called style. In Doty’s first book of magic, momentum, I thought I was just being sledded too fast to see how it was done. Now we have this—Wonderama, with its relaxed texture and magisterial tempos—and I still can’t see how it’s done. But that is a wonder for the way home. For the most and best of this book’s wonders, just open the gate and walk through.”
“When William Carlos Williams wrote ‘Memory is a kind of accomplishment,’ who knew he was writing about Catherine Doty and her long-awaited second book of poems? From the mean streets of midcentury Paterson, where she is accosted by an inexperienced mugger, and the weekly confessional which she leaves with a ‘head full of sin and two Holy Cards,’ to the temple of the boardwalk arcade, Doty takes us on a hurricane-in-a-whirling-teacup rush that is both alarming and beautiful. I found myself reading these poems so many times, I swear, I thought my eyes rubbed the ink off the pages.”
“Wonderama delves gloriously into the shame-filled mess of searing poverty, and finds wonder there, in the absurdity of human meanness, our stupidity, frailty, madness, and kindness. Doty drops us directly inside childhood experience without sentimentality. Despairing as they sometimes are, these are not poems of despair. She’s not looking toward heaven to justify the suffering of the people in these poems. She knows they can’t afford such luxury. Instead, with compassion, humor and often astonishingly beautiful imagery, Doty invites us to stay right here, rooted to the earth with her and them. We’re grateful for the invitation.”
"Catherine Doty’s pitiless poems beautifully show us what we don’t want to see: children’s poverty, abuse, neglect. And their meanness. Poor children living in squalor, which Doty’s language often veils in lyrical glamor."
Winner, 2022