Description |
1 online resource (1 PDF (viii, 55 pages)) |
Series |
Pitt poetry series |
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Pitt poetry series.
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Contents |
Part I. Glass -- All you're losing -- The naturalist -- The Earth -- Crash -- The mouse's nest -- Rock and roll -- Part II. The sonnet -- Where we feel it the most -- Jet pack -- Banks and breaks -- The order -- Bodies of water -- Juan Rulfo -- Fear of glass -- Part III. Whatever it is -- Some things are true -- If we but cease its beauty to display -- The striker in Concord, Massachusetts -- As best we can -- Walt Whitman at Stones River Battlefield: a photograph -- Stones River canticle -- Stones River's robins in the aftermath of war -- Limestone and rain -- Part IV. Ornaments |
Summary |
A reverent jag of irreverence, tilting forward to arresting moments of beauty, astonishment, confusion, and grief, the poems in David Daniel's Ornaments find their myths in history and pop culture; they take their truths, but just as much their doubts, from the fallibility of what we remember and the desperation with which we struggle to reassemble it. Surreal, lyrical, madcap, they bring a faith, above all, in poetry. Which means in people and their bewildered hearts |
Notes |
Poems |
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Print version record |
Subject |
American poetry -- 21st century.
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American poetry
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9780822983187 |
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0822983184 |
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