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Let's Not Call It Consequence
Contributor(s): Deming, Richard (Author)
ISBN: 1905700660     ISBN-13: 9781905700660
Publisher: Shearsman Books
OUR PRICE:   $17.10  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: January 2008
Qty:
Annotation: In Let's Not Call It Consequence, Richard Deming's first full-length collection of poems, the poet brings together abstraction and precise images to explore the intensities and reversals of lyric thinking, that "infinitely stuttering thing." These poems searchingly engage the content and form of anger, violence, intimacy, and the poetics of proximity, exploring the intricacies of language use to find the ways that "to ache, so to speak, is human."
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | American - General
Dewey: 811.6
Physical Information: 0.19" H x 5.5" W x 8.5" (0.25 lbs) 80 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Poetry. In LET'S NOT CALL IT CONSEQUENCE, Richard Deming's first full-length collection of poems, the poet brings together abstraction and precise images to explore the intensities and reversals of lyric thinking, that infinitely stuttering thing. These poems searchingly engage the content and form of anger, violence, intimacy, and the poetics of proximity, exploring the intricacies of language use to find the ways that to ache, so to speak, is human. 'If only/this thinking thing thought thoughts only.' Richard Deming restlessly calculates the split between promised and actual experience. The poems in his impressive new collection balance at an edge of danger syntax can only shadow. Urgency of the day. Argument of the ordinary. 'Each/comma ticks like sleet against/a windowpane. In the cold dawn.'--Susan Howe.

Contributor Bio(s): Deming, Richard: - Deming is a poet and a theorist who works on the philosophy of literature. His poems have appeared in Sulfur, Field, the Indiana Review and Mandorla, as well as "Great American Prose Poems: From Poe to the Present." He is the author of "Let's Not Call It Consequence" and "Listening on All Sides: Toward an Emersonian Ethics of Reading." He is a lecturer at Yale.