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  • af Steve Cushman
    138,95 kr.

  • af Gail Gehlken
    143,95 kr.

  • af Vinita Agrawal
    143,95 kr.

  • af Donald Secreast
    163,95 kr.

  • af Suzanne Richardson
    138,95 kr.

  • af Libby Kurz
    158,95 kr.

    In her debut poetry collection, The Heart Room, poet and nurse Libby Kurz explores the literal heart as a metaphor for the complex realities of love and relationships. Like a body exposed on a surgery table, Kurz dissects the dueling forces of life and death, beauty and suffering, which are simultaneously flowing through the vessels of our own human experience. How do we handle an existence full of so much uncertainty? "Like cupping a bird in your hands," each poem is an invitation to delicately hold the mysteries and paradoxes of our own humanity. The poems "How to Handle a Heart" and "Transplant" winners in the 2017 Poetry Society of Virginia Prize.

  • af Michele Marie Desmarais
    158,95 kr.

    owlmouth is a collection of poems about transformation. Michele Marie Desmarais (Métis, Dakota, European) offers perspectives on the environment, being-in-relationship, the need for change and the process of healing. These poems are an expression of an Indigenous worldview replete with relationships between human and other-than-human persons. owlmouth is about the possibilities of transformation within a life-in the face of colonialism and the sometime liminal identities on the urban rez. Reflecting on experiences of historical trauma due to the Indian Residential/Boarding Schools, as well as climate change and the responsibilities we have for our relatives who include both human and other-than-human persons, owlmouth is also about intergenerational resiliency, healing and the necessities of transforming the dominant culture. Depending on the Nation or culture, an owl may bring medicine, wisdom, or death. These poems explore all three within the overall theme of transformation, and, in doing so, reflect upon belonging, home, Indigenous/Native American perspectives, and the intersection of multiple moments, beings and cultures.

  • af Mary Christine Kane
    168,95 kr.

    In this collection, Mary Christine Kane honors the complicated experience of childhood with a range of voices including a motherless child, a girl who collects toy rings and the adult looking back in longing. The poems remind us what comfort and longing feel like by opening the interior life of children-both moments like rolling down a grassy hill but also those of trying to reconcile life's hardest topics.

  • af Stephanie Laterza
    168,95 kr.

    Inspired by Psyche and Eros, The Psyche Trials envisions a feminist resolution for Psyche along a sensual path from infatuation and loss to self-love and discovery. The poem "Cherimoya Heart" was among L'Éphémère Review's Best of 2018.

  • af Susan E. Oringel
    168,95 kr.

    The story of one family and of the country: the lives and deaths of the parents of a Jewish, second- and third-generation immigrant family beginning in Coney Island.

  • af Tamara K. Walker
    168,95 kr.

  • af Lana Issam Ghannam
    168,95 kr.

    In Two Tongues, Lana Issam Ghannam writes about her experiences growing up as a first-generation Palestinian-American in post-9/11 America. She creates small scenes from big perspectives in each poem as she navigates her two cultures from adolescence to adulthood. She moves in and out of family duty, religion, culture, gender expectations, patriotism, and competing languages in the search for her truest identity. These poems represent her growth, stand for her pride, and strive for the absolute strength known by so many immigrated families-"I grow beneath the ground / in this America of coloring seas. / …I am of this earth, this flame / …I own the roots of this land."

  • af Kristin Brace
    168,95 kr.

    Exploring themes such as secrets, illness, and obsession, the poems in Kristin Brace's Each Darkness Inside lead the reader on an intimate journey through the overlooked and the unspoken. Desire, restlessness, and regret play out against backdrops of art, memory, geography, and nature, rendering the interior landscape as rich and varied as the visible world.

  • af Amanda Russell
    168,95 kr.

  • af Bethanie Humphreys
    168,95 kr.

  • af Winifred Hughes
    158,95 kr.

    The poems in Frost Flowers by Winifred Hughes plunge, open-eyed and open-hearted, into the natural world-its seasonal rhythms and impenetrable mysteries, its vanishings, its incorrigible quality of being alive. They seek to chronicle the encounter between the non-human and the all-too-human, the passion and longing of our species as we relate to our natural environment, both apart from it and a part of it. Like the swallows and tanagers and foxes, like the box elder and frostweed, we are transitory creatures living in vivid moments. These poems are propelled by curiosity, precise observation, and a sense of wonder; they are a searching, a probing into the secrets at the heart of natural processes, which are the fundamental processes of life and death. The natural world appears under all its contradictory aspects-sharp stones in a streambed, hatchlings clinging to their precarious nest, wildflowers that are both beautiful and poisonous, the exuberance and overflowing life of a flock of blackbirds. In the midst of such fullness and blossoming, there is always the possibility of frost, whether nipping early buds or being transformed into late-blooming flowers made of ice. Like our fellow species, from hardwood trees growing slowly over centuries to small passerines with speeded-up metabolisms, we are subject to the passage of time; before we can quite grasp it, our moment is gone. Throughout, we are inextricably bound up in our natural context, in the wild places and wildlife that are increasingly threatened by human activity.

  • af Bill Cushing
    218,95 kr.

  • af Kathleen Mccoy
    218,95 kr.

  • af Pat Falk
    218,95 kr.

    The title poem, "Common Violence," introduces the themes, images and sections of the book: war, terrorism, environmental desecration, domestic abuse, and physical disease. Not only do these facets of our lives have "violence in common," but the presence and news of violence around us is all too common, becoming the norm. The poem's call for grace, however, along with several poems embodying perceptions of beauty, love, and courage, create restorative counterpoints and promises of renewal.

  • af Sharon Ankrum
    158,95 kr.

  • af Susan Woods Morse
    168,95 kr.

  • af Annette Sisson
    168,95 kr.

  • af James Capozzi
    218,95 kr.

  • af Kindra McDonald
    218,95 kr.

  • af Peggy Schimmelman
    168,95 kr.

  • af Stacy Russo
    168,95 kr.

    Everyday Magic is a poetry collection by California poet and librarian, Stacy Russo. The collection features poems celebrating the joy and beauty of common experiences. Fictional and autobiographical poems are included. Leticia Del Toro, author of Café Colima, states, "Everyday Magic revels in solitude and simple pleasures. Stacy Russo evokes the power inherent in cultivating a sanctuary for the creative self." According to artist and author Toti O'Brien, "Everyday Magic is a choral pilgrimage peopled by a variety of fresh, poignant, indelible portraits of women." Readers will discover celebration, joy, and liberation, as well as survival of trauma and abuse.

  • af Sarah Whiteley
    168,95 kr.

    Fed by a love of the Pacific Northwest's natural abundance, Sarah Whiteley makes observations and connections with often startling clarity. The beauty in these new pieces lies in their simple richness. Whiteley finds ways to explore small moments which might otherwise be overlooked, and turns them into crystalline revelations.

  • af Judith Prest
    168,95 kr.

  • af Kay Reid
    218,95 kr.

  • af Patty Seyburn
    218,95 kr.

    Threshold Delivery takes a lyrical look at how we approach the death of our loved ones - and how we confront the various thresholds in our lives. These poems guide the reader through ritual, tradition, and mystical interpretations of how and why we mourn, and how we conduct our lives after knowing grief. Though referencing Jewish tradition, these poems ask the reader to confront their own strategies and observance. They call upon pathos, personal history and humor, confronting the everyday with no shortage of joy, irony, and bafflement. Poems range from short personal meditations and anecdotal narratives to associative flights of imagination and winding explorations, replete with historical oddities and popular culture. Densely musical and voice driven, poems take the reader on journeys through personal and family history, mapping the movement of the heart and mind through life's most challenging moments. A series of poems, on the surface about Mah Jongg, look at interweaving cultural histories and how the social world affects our behavior, while asking us to consider what we inherit, what we bring with, and what we pass down, as we "draw and discard."