God's Optimism
Author: Yehoshua November
Publisher: Main Street Rag
Published: 2010
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9781599482644
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Winner of the 2010 Main Street Rag Poetry Book Award."
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Author: Yehoshua November
Publisher: Main Street Rag
Published: 2010
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9781599482644
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Winner of the 2010 Main Street Rag Poetry Book Award."
Author: Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Publisher:
Published: 1915
Total Pages: 158
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Claudia Rankine
Publisher: Graywolf Press
Published: 2024-07-09
Total Pages: 183
ISBN-13: 1644452561
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA brilliant and unsparing examination of America in the early twenty-first century, Claudia Rankine’s Don’t Let Me Be Lonely invents a new genre to confront the particular loneliness and rapacious assault on selfhood that our media have inflicted upon our lives. Fusing the lyric, the essay, and the visual, Rankine negotiates the enduring anxieties of medicated depression, race riots, divisive elections, terrorist attacks, and ongoing wars—doom scrolling through the daily news feeds that keep us glued to our screens and that have come to define our age. First published in 2004, Don’t Let Me Be Lonely is a hauntingly prescient work, one that has secured a permanent place in American literature. This new edition is presented in full color with updated visuals and text, including a new preface by the author, and matches the composition of Rankine’s best-selling and award-winning Citizen and Just Us as the first book in her acclaimed American trilogy. Don’t Let Me Be Lonely is a crucial guide to surviving a fractured and fracturing American consciousness—a book of rare and vital honesty, complexity, and presence.
Author: E. C. Belli
Publisher: SIU Press
Published: 2019-03-11
Total Pages: 89
ISBN-13: 0809337266
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBy turns stoic and ravaged, but always with gutting honesty, E. C. Belli invites readers to consider the smallest rooms of the intimate in this first collection. With each poem pared down to an elemental language both slight and clear, Belli’s work exhibits a surprising muscularity in its poise. Objects of Hunger explores in reflective, raw lyrics the dread and beauty of our inner worlds as expressed through our struggles against the self and the other. Each poem is a slender organism that speaks its own mind, unafraid of pathos; the emotions here have been tried on and lived in, and the work accrues, lyric after lyric, page after page. In the second section, World War I poems are broken down and dismantled, as the voices of that era’s poets meld with that of a postpartum mother, exposing a shared vernacular among these disparate experiences. Other poems in the collection explore the unraveling and entrapments of the domestic, but with tenacity in place of softness, using a lexicon gathered from Virginia Woolf’s The Waves and Djuna Barnes’s Nightwood, among others. What emerges is a finely chiseled portrait of intimacy, one that takes seriously love and all discord, the fracas of reticence and familiarity. Belli gives this world to us by way of a throbbing asceticism, in an exploration of resignation, concession, persistence, and monstrosity. This collection tells what it is to need with abandon.
Author: Wayne Visser
Publisher: Lulu.com
Published:
Total Pages: 158
ISBN-13: 1908875372
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Jane Hirshfield
Publisher: Harper Collins
Published: 2002-04-02
Total Pages: 98
ISBN-13: 0060959010
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn this luminous and authoritative new collection, Jane Hirshfield presents an ever-deepening and altering comprehension of human existence in poems utterly unique, as William Matthews once wrote of her work, in their "praise of ceaseless mutability as life's central splendor." In poems complex in meaning yet clear in statement and depiction, Hirshfield explores questions of identity, aging, death, and of time and the variegated gifts brought by its relentless passage. Whether meditating upon a button, the role of habit in our lives, or the elusive nature of our relationship to sleep, Hirshfield brings each subject into a surprising and magnified existence.
Author: Salena Godden
Publisher: Rough Trade Books
Published: 2020-06-01
Total Pages: 81
ISBN-13: 1912722461
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA collection of 13 pieces of courage and resistance, this is work inspired by protests and rallies. Poems written for the women's march, for women's empowerment and amplification, poems that salute people fighting for justice, poems on sexism and racism, class discrimination, period poverty and homelessness, immigration and identity. This work reminds us that Courage is a Muscle, it also contains a letter from the spirit of Hope herself, because as the title suggests, Pessimism is for Lightweights.
Author: Jane Hirshfield
Publisher: Bloodaxe Books
Published: 2005
Total Pages: 244
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKJane Hirshfield is a visionary American writer whose poems ask nothing less than what it is to be human. Both sensual meditations and passionate investigations, they reveal complex truths in language luminous and precise. Rooted in the living world, her poems celebrate and elucidate a hard-won affirmation of our human fate. Born of a rigorous questioning of heart, spirit and mind, they have become indispensible to many American readers in navigating their own lives. Hers is a poetry of clarity and hybrid vigour, drawing deeply on English and American traditions but also those of world poetry. The poetries of modern and classical Greece, of Horace and Catullus, of classical China and Japan and Eastern Europe all resonate in Jane Hirshfield's structures of thought and in her sensibilities. Indelibly of our time yet seated in the lineage of poetic discovery, these poems are meant to endure.
Author: James Galvin
Publisher: Copper Canyon Press
Published: 2009
Total Pages: 90
ISBN-13: 1556592965
DOWNLOAD EBOOKJames Galvin is a Wyoming rancher and on the permanent faculty at the Iowa Writers' Workshop.
Author: Alex Dimitrov
Publisher: Copper Canyon Press
Published: 2021-02-18
Total Pages: 120
ISBN-13: 161932234X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAlex Dimitrov’s third book, Love and Other Poems, is full of praise for the world we live in. Taking time as an overarching structure—specifically, the twelve months of the year—Dimitrov elevates the everyday, and speaks directly to the reader as if the poem were a phone call or a text message. From the personal to the cosmos, the moon to New York City, the speaker is convinced that love is “our best invention.” Dimitrov doesn’t resist joy, even in despair. These poems are curious about who we are as people and shamelessly interested in hope.