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Taking the Train of Singularity South from Midtown

Taking the Train of Singularity South from Midtown in Franklin, TN

Current price: $16.00
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Taking the Train of Singularity South from Midtown

Barnes and Noble

Taking the Train of Singularity South from Midtown in Franklin, TN

Current price: $16.00
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Size: OS

From Author:
The general theme of this book, and a number of its individual poems, is that love and language create community. There is little self-reference and confession—or only when I couldn’t help it. Set in Gloucester, New York, or Paris, in Panama or Newtown, the poems come from a commitment to civic poetry, a poetry of social place and witness. I am deeply thankful to the citizens of Gloucester, Massachussetts, for the honor of serving as Poet Laureate of such a wonderful city. During my term, a strong belief in civic poetry grew stronger.
By civic poetry, I mean poems written for the public on community topics. I mean poetry accessible to an attentive, general audience. And since it is often meant to be read in public, I mean poetry that relies on sound and familiar forms: rhyming tricks, assonance, consonance, regular rhythms, refrain and stanza, couplets, the workhorse sonnet, etc. And of course, civic poetry, like all poetry, is insightful, well-crafted and fresh, never talks down, and is never watered down.
Besides accessibility, sound, rhythm, and freshness, there is another necessary ingredient in civic poetry: hope. Not innocent or immature hope, nothing naive. It may be a battered hope, even diminished, but is not cowed or faint, remains brassy, unabashed. Civic poetry makes no apologies for believing in our stressed and distorted, but wonderful national experiment."
From Author:
The general theme of this book, and a number of its individual poems, is that love and language create community. There is little self-reference and confession—or only when I couldn’t help it. Set in Gloucester, New York, or Paris, in Panama or Newtown, the poems come from a commitment to civic poetry, a poetry of social place and witness. I am deeply thankful to the citizens of Gloucester, Massachussetts, for the honor of serving as Poet Laureate of such a wonderful city. During my term, a strong belief in civic poetry grew stronger.
By civic poetry, I mean poems written for the public on community topics. I mean poetry accessible to an attentive, general audience. And since it is often meant to be read in public, I mean poetry that relies on sound and familiar forms: rhyming tricks, assonance, consonance, regular rhythms, refrain and stanza, couplets, the workhorse sonnet, etc. And of course, civic poetry, like all poetry, is insightful, well-crafted and fresh, never talks down, and is never watered down.
Besides accessibility, sound, rhythm, and freshness, there is another necessary ingredient in civic poetry: hope. Not innocent or immature hope, nothing naive. It may be a battered hope, even diminished, but is not cowed or faint, remains brassy, unabashed. Civic poetry makes no apologies for believing in our stressed and distorted, but wonderful national experiment."

More About Barnes and Noble at CoolSprings Galleria

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