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Cargando... Latest Volcanopor Tana Jean Welch
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Poetry. "A book of ruthless poise, LATEST VOLCANO masters form and forms—pantoum, sestina, terza rima, narrative, elegy—well- suited to its wily protagonist, Eros. A canny figure, unabashed by war or fidelity, in league with cruelty and memory, Eros, somewhat at the expense of the poet, evolves a wild, patient, don't-mess-with-me self- knowledge. "Stay still and love/ fades..." she says; but you, are you to move on? Loop back? Dance for your life? Well, all of those."—Stephanie Strickland No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)811.6Literature English (North America) American poetry 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio: No hay valoraciones.¿Eres tú?Conviértete en un Autor de LibraryThing. |
This is a collection of poems that hits in a number of ways. I was caught up from the beginning:
...in the bath tub she finds
the tiny toxic lobsters laced
between the bed sheets.
and there one will find a recurring theme of her father's death or murder. Oranges, the fruit and the color, are also laced throughout the work many times with a dark meaning. From the sweetest oranges ever tasted to the girl with the orange scarf . There is passion and the discovery of passion where one does not expect, but also an interesting description traditional relationships. The rich man who gives her pleasure is simply referred to as "the man whose penis I sometimes hold." instead of a term of endearment.
"While Waiting" provides interesting twists on what we believe and what really is happening. This is done through the Bighorn sheep and concludes with an unexpected discovery about a stuffed animal. "Leda Burning, Immendorf Palace, 1945" describes the a German SS soldier burning Leda and the Swan. It is an act of destruction but there is a perverse beauty in the description of the destruction that seems to match the deviant undertone of the painting.
There is a uniqueness in this work that is refreshing and at times historical and personal. The reader will understand the poet’s claim:
The serious soul should not be landlocked.
And neither will the reader. Enjoy the journey.