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"It may be profligate, but is it not life?" asks Lord Byron. This is poetry with an edge.
Combining grit and grandeur while mingling religion and sex, science and spirituality, this intense examination of life reveals the author's struggles with the nature of reality and existence, in language both simple and complex, erudite and approachable.
Showing influences of Bukowski, Poe, Cohen, and a tinge of Greek mythology, the author examines wonder, pain, love, and fantasy.
"The Lizard and the Tamarind" is a stirring tribute about the death of a fellow poet. "Explanation of the Universe" does a good job of fulfilling its goal. "Square-Breasted Poem" is a quirky romp through anatomy and modernist painting.
A strong and diverse volume that addresses themes with which we all grapple.
[These poems]are highly personal, experiential. Some of the experience seems to be supremely private. But what struck me most about them was the free association of the images, the kind of free flowing exuberance of the visual. The intensity of feeling is superior.... Their complexity is almost painful.... I was moved, confused, astounded, curious, excited.
-- Ann Beals, University of Central Oklahoma
As you would imagine in a collection called Terra, these poems will take you places. They compel you across varied planes of the mind: love, dreams, wonder, mourning. But how diverse your journey encompassing the night-beat of a flaneur, the death of a light bulb, a bricklayer's manifesto, a film noir dream, the spirals of a lover's earring--and an explanation of the universe. With wry metaphor yet steady vision, Fletcher spotlights the quirks of human longing and the enigmas of memory. Open it anywhere and you will find a memento to take with you. -- Eva Bednar, Humber College, Canada
Explore these samples for a glimpse into Terra.
A TOURIST SEEKS ROME
Above the cobblestones
in a lost park
among the ruined statues
a headless couple lock in eternal embrace
they are without names
their passions carved in rock
their gowns have become leaves and vines
growing, dying, blowing away
the mouths of their souls
seek lost lips of flesh and marble
rivulets of sinter
fill crevices like shadows
leaves blow beneath her thighs
and under his shoulders
their dead bone opens on the stone divan
as I fall between them
our limbs combine
tourists record the details
how we flickered for an instant
like a match in the rain
HALLEY'S COMET
When the moon is red as satin
and larger than the myth of Halley's comet
when silhouettes of elms meld
into the night
at the edge of its circumference
and our earth becomes black
and empties itself into me
I smile in the crimson dark
and search my pocket
for a penny to rub,
...
Combining grit and grandeur while mingling religion and sex, science and spirituality, this intense examination of life reveals the author's struggles with the nature of reality and existence, in language both simple and complex, erudite and approachable.
Showing influences of Bukowski, Poe, Cohen, and a tinge of Greek mythology, the author examines wonder, pain, love, and fantasy.
"The Lizard and the Tamarind" is a stirring tribute about the death of a fellow poet. "Explanation of the Universe" does a good job of fulfilling its goal. "Square-Breasted Poem" is a quirky romp through anatomy and modernist painting.
A strong and diverse volume that addresses themes with which we all grapple.
[These poems]are highly personal, experiential. Some of the experience seems to be supremely private. But what struck me most about them was the free association of the images, the kind of free flowing exuberance of the visual. The intensity of feeling is superior.... Their complexity is almost painful.... I was moved, confused, astounded, curious, excited.
-- Ann Beals, University of Central Oklahoma
As you would imagine in a collection called Terra, these poems will take you places. They compel you across varied planes of the mind: love, dreams, wonder, mourning. But how diverse your journey encompassing the night-beat of a flaneur, the death of a light bulb, a bricklayer's manifesto, a film noir dream, the spirals of a lover's earring--and an explanation of the universe. With wry metaphor yet steady vision, Fletcher spotlights the quirks of human longing and the enigmas of memory. Open it anywhere and you will find a memento to take with you. -- Eva Bednar, Humber College, Canada
Explore these samples for a glimpse into Terra.
A TOURIST SEEKS ROME
Above the cobblestones
in a lost park
among the ruined statues
a headless couple lock in eternal embrace
they are without names
their passions carved in rock
their gowns have become leaves and vines
growing, dying, blowing away
the mouths of their souls
seek lost lips of flesh and marble
rivulets of sinter
fill crevices like shadows
leaves blow beneath her thighs
and under his shoulders
their dead bone opens on the stone divan
as I fall between them
our limbs combine
tourists record the details
how we flickered for an instant
like a match in the rain
HALLEY'S COMET
When the moon is red as satin
and larger than the myth of Halley's comet
when silhouettes of elms meld
into the night
at the edge of its circumference
and our earth becomes black
and empties itself into me
I smile in the crimson dark
and search my pocket
for a penny to rub,
...
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9781537711133
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 160
- Utgivningsdatum: 2016-12-09
- Förlag: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform