Idaho's Poetry
Author: Ronald E. McFarland
Publisher:
Published: 1988
Total Pages: 258
ISBN-13:
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Author: Ronald E. McFarland
Publisher:
Published: 1988
Total Pages: 258
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Lawrence Y. Matsuda
Publisher:
Published: 2010
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9780982636404
DOWNLOAD EBOOKSome pains take lifetimes to get through. Matsuda's poems break for us all the Japanese-American code of silence toward the indignities of the nine U. S. government-mandated internment camps of WWII like Minidoka in Idaho where Matsuda was born.
Author: Emily Ruskovich
Publisher:
Published: 2017
Total Pages: 322
ISBN-13: 0812994043
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA tale told from multiple perspectives traces the complicated relationship between Ann and Wade on a rugged landscape and how they came together in the aftermath of his first wife's imprisonment for a violent murder.
Author: Yingwu Wei
Publisher: Copper Canyon Press
Published: 2009
Total Pages: 394
ISBN-13: 1556592795
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPresents one hundred fifty poems in Chinese and English translation by a classic eighth-century Chinese poet little known in the West, with explanatory notes accompanying each one.
Author: Elizabeth Bradfield
Publisher:
Published: 2022-06
Total Pages:
ISBN-13: 9781946482679
DOWNLOAD EBOOKCascadia: A Field Guide through Art, Ecology, and Poetry is a luminous mixed-genre anthology, which highlights the Cascadia bioregion and 126 of the living beings who call this area home. This collection, edited by Elizabeth Bradfield, CMarie Fuhrman, and Derek Sheffield, will combine creative writing, visual art, and natural and cultural histories, all to help readers identify and identify with the beings who inhabit this biodiverse region.
Author: W. Todd Kaneko
Publisher:
Published: 2020
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9781625578181
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPoetry. Asian & Asian American Studies. "THIS IS HOW THE BONE SINGS by W. Todd Kaneko carries the pulse of ancient lament through the boneyards of war and unspeakable trauma. This lyric collection of profound beauty and grief reminds us to share our tales of generational trauma and topography--shaping our individual and collective memories--in place of forgotten histories."--Karen An-hwei Lee "What does it mean to be safe in America? In THIS IS HOW THE BONE SINGS, W. Todd Kaneko explores the legacy of concentration camps in the United States and how memory is carried forward. This book knows how to sing--to America, not its expected script, but the anthems of its history; and to a son, lessons on how to bring back the dead with stories, with a fading map, with birds."--Traci Brimhall "The best books about history are those that are also about the future. W. Todd Kaneko's marvelous THIS IS HOW THE BONE SINGS is more than a mere song--it is a singing across time and distance. In lyrics both personal and political, Kaneko composes a score that spans four generations, connecting his grandparents, who were prisoners in the unfathomable Minidoka concentration camps, to his young son and this unfathomable era in which he was born."--Dean Rader "To enter this book is to enter an orchard alive with memory's beasts. To read THIS IS HOW THE BONE SINGS is to witness how a poet at the height of his powers can alchemize history's violence into lyric and myth."--Brynn Saito "These are much-needed poems of unapologetic tenderness and talent--in other words, this collection does the near-impossible: it points us towards love even if what we know of this world doesn't."--Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Author: joshualewmcdermott
Publisher: Lulu.com
Published: 2014-02-25
Total Pages: 33
ISBN-13: 1304893375
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPoet and activist Joshua Lew McDermott takes on his home state of Idaho's political crimes in this poetry collection, critiquing everything from the state's recent wolf extermination policy, to his own father's struggle with working class poverty, to the massacre of Native Americans over a century ago.
Author: John Myers
Publisher:
Published: 2018
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9780998829043
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPoetry. LGBTQIA Studies. SMUDGY AND LOSSY, the first collection of poetry by Idaho-based poet John Myers, offers us a map to a borderless and psychedelically rural landscape--poems begin and end without notice, and the titular characters, Smudgy and Lossy, fade in and out of the rustic settings, situations, and daily chores that Myers assigns to them, "look[ing] for delicate flowers that bloom through hard sand or clay." With an expansive and textured queerness covering each page, the flat horizons of these poems sit too far away to navigate their identity with any certainty. Building continuously toward the collection's final swirling 13 pages, a 127-line list poem leaves us with one of the most exciting and bewildering poetic finales in recent memory. "Both in the characters and the way the poems emote, I become 'wrapped in' John Myers's exquisite collection of poems SMUDGY AND LOSSY; their 'roaring and wandering' lyrics that might wear 'out a blue rectangle.' I am enamored with the style: poems that hold the lyric and its reproof, granting me more of their intensity. The poems scorn and celebrate--with equal gusto--feelings and attitudes that shift, deepen, and advise. The poems hold the imagination in front of the image, glossing-over or rusting the poem's sentiment. Take for example the poem 'Lossy,' which opens with 'laugh gorgeous and laugh shy.' Does it instruct or describe? Both. And the other poems, too, are just as gorgeous and shy. In the end these poems reveal only what they intend: to loom 'beyond Eros and ferns.'"--Prageeta Sharma