The perils of geography
(1995)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Brick Books, 1995
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781771312318 (electronic bk.) MWT12152722, 1771312319 (electronic bk.) 12152722
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

In her third book of poetry The Perils of Geography, Helen Humphreys charts a world that opens under the prodding and promise of language. With the wit and eye for evocative detail which gained readers for both Gods and Other Mortals and Nuns Looking Anxious, Listening to Radios, Humphreys probes the immediacy of now, the intensity of this, the residue of then. Don't be deceived by the spare appearance; her poems are resonant and full, "all angles and confidence." Light falls slant across them. She maps "what surrounds not what's made still" -- "the moving line." The line she traces connects the pull of memory and moment, open roads and winter aconite, transcendental basements and ornamental shrubbery. In "Singing to the Bees," the ten poem sequence which makes up the second of three sections in Perils, she slips inside folk wisdoms, wears them with an easy grace, all flesh and wit and possibility: dancing shoes, gifted pigs, swarming bees, airplane nuns and spectre ships. These poems make superstition delicious

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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