Udvidet returret til d. 31. januar 2024

Bøger i Carnegie Mellon University Press Essays (CHICAGO) serien

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  • af Michael Dennis Browne
    180,95 kr.

  • af Jeff Friedman
    167,95 kr.

  • af Samuel Green
    145,95 kr.

    Through the course of numerous books, Samuel Green has established his primary poetic preoccupations, and in Disturbing the Light, he continues to mine them, addressing rituals and work in a small, isolated, rural community; the influence of the past on the present, especially in families; and the nature and evolution of a love that has spanned five decades. Added to these themes is something new: Poems written in response to symptoms of late onset PTSD. Though Green's Coast Guard service in Vietnam ended in the fall of 1969, memories have returned recently in vivid, disturbing details, amplified by the haunting knowledge that civilians in Southeast Asia are still, today, suffering death and injury from unexploded ordnance left over from that war. A powerful collection that reminds us that our past is always with us, even as we attend carefully to the present, Disturbing the Light is a masterwork from a poet at the height of his powers.

  • af Joyce Peseroff
    162,95 kr.

  • af W. S. Di Piero
    180,95 kr.

  • af Juan Francisco De Dios
    216,95 kr.

    "Leonardo Balada: La Mirada Oceâanica was first published in Spanish by Editorial Alpuerto, S.A., Madrid in 2012."--Title page verso.

  • af Peter Cooley
    145,95 kr.

  • af Nava Etshalom
    145,95 kr.

    "The Knives We Need is a settler-colonial coming-of-age tale, set in landscapes in Palestine and the United States. In short, iterative lyric poems, Nava Etshalom combs through disastrous settler genealogies. Wittily, meticulously, the collection unpicks the stitches of nationalism, sees its costs sidelong, and goes looking for another kind of home"--

  • af Rebecca Morgan Frank
    145,95 kr.

  • af Rainie Oet
    145,95 kr.

    "Glorious Veils of Diane is about the weird way children turn themselves inside out on the world, and a reimagining of the author's own childhood. Diane is an ever-changing archetype, a self-conscious child who's seen too many horror movies and is discovering, for the first time, her own blood. A child who thinks she is God, and who sees every person in her life as an extension of herself. A child who is possessed, beloved, and ignored. The book emerges through a chorus of voices belonging to Diane, the people around her, and Blood itself. At some point, Diane disappears. The book then investigates that disappearance, jumping back and forth through time, the physical world, and the spirit world. Ultimately, it suggests that Diane is not what is behind the veils; Diane is the veils"--

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