Limit this search to....

The Willow Grove
Contributor(s): Sheck, Laurie (Author)
ISBN: 0679766030     ISBN-13: 9780679766032
Publisher: Knopf Publishing Group
OUR PRICE:   $11.70  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 1998
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: Laurie Sheck interweaves the contemporary with the mythic, creating a realm in which such things as radios, skyscrapers, expressways, and mannequins are at once familiar and strange; immediate, yet tinged with the light of distance and myth. It is a realm where faces on a television newscast disappear "into the undertow / of hunger for the next thing and the next", and mannequins "stand in their angelic armor". Placed at intervals throughout these pages is a series of poems entitled "From The Book of Persephone", poems that explore the underworld through a fractured contemporary lens, depicting it as a psychological landscape of isolation and desire.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | American - General
Dewey: 811.54
Physical Information: 0.3" H x 6.15" W x 9.25" (0.37 lbs) 80 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Laurie Sheck interweaves the contemporary with the mythic, creating a realm in which such things as radios, skyscrapers, expressways, and mannequins are at once familiar and strange; immediate, yet tinged with the light of distance and myth. It is a realm where faces on a television newscast disappear "into the undertow / of hunger for the next thing and the next," and mannequins "stand in their angelic armor."

Placed at intervals throughout these pages is a series of poems entitled "From The Book of Persephone," poems that explore the underworld through a fractured contemporary lens, depicting it as a psychological landscape of isolation and desire.

As Mona Van Duyn said of Laurie Sheck's previous book, Io at Night, "When her sensibility and the reverberating myth are in perfect conjunction, the extraordinary happens: the mythical figure enters the poet's imagination so consumingly that it is impossible to tell whose life, whose feelings fill the form on the page."