Grace

Grace

Author: John Hodgen

Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press

Published: 2006-08-07

Total Pages: 80

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Winner of the 2005 Donald Hall Prize in Poetry. Grace is John Hodgen’s third book of poetry. He is a poet of extreme contrasts, offering us the dregs of despair, yet instantly recalling hope in the beauty of nature or in a moment in time when all is right, when we realize grace. In “For the Leapers” the narrator relates, “We will fall past the angels, / we will fall from such height, / our tears will lift up from our eyes. / We will fall straight through hell. / And then we will rise.” Hodgen’s poems roam through history, religion, man-made disasters, baseball, pop culture, and Wal-Marts, on paths that come full circle with remarkable completeness, maturity, and dexterity.


Poems of Grace

Poems of Grace

Author: Church Publishing

Publisher: Church Publishing, Inc.

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 644

ISBN-13: 9780898691580

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Reading hymns as poetry for meditation and understanding has long been an Anglican practice. Some hymnals in England print one stanza with music and the rest as poetry. Americans have preferred that texts be interlined with music for ease and instruction in singing. This text-only edition of The Hymnal 1982 brings out the beauty and meaning of the poetry that has moved Christians to ministry for hundreds of years. This handsome red book is a companion to the study edition of the Book of Common Prayer and is an ideal accompaniment to A Closer Walk: Meditating on Hymns for Year A and Awake, My Soul: Meditating on Hymns for Year B by Nancy Roth.


A Day's Grace

A Day's Grace

Author: Robyn Sarah

Publisher: The Porcupine's Quill

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 84

ISBN-13: 9780889842335

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Eric Ormsby wrote that `So assured and musical is the hand that shaped them that these poems tend to memorize themselves, as though they had always formed part of our experience.' This is Sarah's sixth full-length collection, marked by its humility, joy and philosophical elegance.


Here and Somewhere Else

Here and Somewhere Else

Author: Grace Paley

Publisher: Feminist Press

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 168

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Two married writers express their shared activism in a surprising range of styles and voices.


Fidelity

Fidelity

Author: Grace Paley

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Published: 2014-07-15

Total Pages: 97

ISBN-13: 146687581X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Just before her death in 2007 at the age of eighty-four, Grace Paley completed Fidelity, a wise and poignant book of poems. Full of memories of friends and family and incisive observations of life in both her beloved hometown, New York City, and rural Vermont, the poems are sober and playful, experimenting with form while remaining eminently readable. They explore the beginnings and ends of relationships, the ties that bind siblings, the workings of dreams, the surreal strangeness of the aging body—all imbued with her unique perspective and voice. Mournful and nostalgic, but also ruefully funny and full of love, Fidelity is Grace Paley's passionate and haunting elegy for the life she was leaving behind.


Begin Again

Begin Again

Author: K. A. Applegate

Publisher: Scholastic Paperbacks

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 152

ISBN-13: 9780590877374

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Despite the odds stacked up against them, the Remnants seem to be surviving in the Rock's harsh environment while living peacefully with the inhabitants, but this new world still has its set of problems that Billy cannot handle.


Rain of Grace

Rain of Grace

Author: SIAM

Publisher: Createspace Independent Pub

Published: 2006-03-07

Total Pages: 200

ISBN-13: 9781419636189

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A masterfully constructed book of psycho-spiritual poems that may make you laugh; may make you cry, but you surely will not be bored – a profoundly unique creative literary experience, chronicling the last thirty years of a great Mystic's journey toward spiritual purification, illumination, resurrection, and ascension. Rain of Grace, New & Selected Poems is more than just another typical book of poetry; it is an extraordinary transformative symphonic poetical encounter.


The Grace of Distance

The Grace of Distance

Author: Matthew Thorburn

Publisher: LSU Press

Published: 2019-08-14

Total Pages: 96

ISBN-13: 0807171867

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In The Grace of Distance, his poignant, far-traveling new collection of poems, Matthew Thorburn explores the ways in which we try to close the distances we experience in modern life—between doubt and faith, between cultures, between ourselves and those we love. He seeks to name, and find, that elusive, essential sense of connection humanity hungers for. In one poem, a boy places a bell in the hollow of a tree so someone might find it. In others, an overworked baker wishes for an annunciation of her own, while a man calls down into a well until another voice calls back. Set in China and America, in the present and the distant past, Thorburn’s poems examine both Eastern and Western ideas of spirituality, looking closely at the ways we can lose faith, then sometimes find it again. The poems also confront the unbridgeable distances we must live with and the perhaps surprising grace they can provide—a greater sense of perspective, understanding, and peace—even as our lives move in the only direction they can, away from the past.


A Difficult Grace

A Difficult Grace

Author: Michael Ryan

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 204

ISBN-13: 9780820322643

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

“[In] preliterate societies, even those as late as ancient Greece and Anglo-Saxon England, the poet is the ideologue, historian, theologian, philosopher, TV, newspaper, Internet, and megamultiplex cinema rolled into one”--so begins Michael Ryan’s lively description of the cultural context of ancient poetry, in pointed contrast to that of poetry now. Informed by his own experience as a poet and writer, A Difficult Grace examines the lives and works of Dickinson, Yeats, Pound, Eliot, Williams, Whitman, Frost, Bishop, and Stevens (as well as other poets and writers before and since), deftly combining literary history, critical writing by the writers themselves, and Ryan's expert understanding of their work. The result is a collection of powerfully argued essays written in a style easily accessible to a wide range of readers. Attending to the difficult graces of form, structure, rhythm, and technique, Ryan illuminates the unifying subject of his book: the vocation of the poet and the writer in the contemporary world. This is an essential book for both writers and readers.