Holyoke

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A01=Frank X. Gaspar
ancestral landscapes in verse
and identity
art
Author_Frank X. Gaspar
Azorean heritage in literature
Category=DC
Category=DCF
Category=WDMC2
Catholic traditions in verse
celebration of ordinary life
coastal and seafaring imagery
contemporary American poet
cultural memory in literature
cultural roots in contemporary poetry
daily rituals and human endurance
domestic rituals and family labor
elegiac and reflective poetry
elegy to vanished worlds
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
everyday life in poetry
fishing village life in poetry
Frank X. Gaspar poetry collection
immigrant experiences in America
immigrant labor and fishing communities
immigrant voices in New England
intergenerational stories
intimate family portraits
laborers and working-class families
loss and longing in poetry
lyrical exploration of longing
lyrical observation of daily life
maritime and coastal imagery
maritime heritage and cultural memory
meditation on family and ancestry
memory
memory and cultural preservation
moral and emotional observation
nature and human experience
New England Catholic communities
New England literary voices
North Atlantic seafaring
nuanced depiction of heritage
observing ordinary life poetically
personal and communal history
poetic craftsmanship and diction
poetic exploration of loss
poetic narrative of survival
poetic reflections on heritage
Poetry
Portuguese immigrant traditions
Portuguese-American identity
sense of place in verse
small-town America in verse
spiritual and cultural continuity
vivid imagery in modern poetry
work and domesticity in poetry
working-class narratives in

Product details

  • ISBN 9781933227207
  • Weight: 525g
  • Dimensions: 149 x 220mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Aug 2007
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Holyoke, out of print for several years and now reissued here in an entirely new edition, was the first collection of poems by one of America s distinctive voices in contemporary poetry. In this book Frank X. Gaspar establishes his landscape, his straightforward diction, his precise observation, and his loyalty to his roots qualities that are never abandoned but continue to develop throughout his later work. Taken as a whole, the book can be read as an elegy to a lost world one peopled with fisherman and laborers and wives and mothers, all adhering, to one degree or another, to an Old-World Catholic way of life. The men fish in the perilous North Atlantic waters. The old ones, the velhos and velhas, still speak in the old tongue and dream of the green hills of their Azorean homeland. That world has largely vanished, but it is not completely lost, for the poet keeps it alive, first in memory and then in art. First Snow is about the arrival of another mouth to feed, but it also details daily life in that unnamed fishing town. The mother sifts coal ashes from the parlor stove; the uncle splits kindling on the sidewalk. In other poems we see the family heating the house s bathwater stovetop in a copper tub, or the young protagonist diving for money thrown by tourists. But in each poem, no matter how everyday life is rendered, something deeper, something lying behind or beyond the everyday, is sought for: They reach into their pockets/and stars fall around you./You scoop them from the world/while the quiet longing/comes to you, aching deep/in the lobes of your chest. Longing, observing, wondering, marveling The Holyoke explores the small raptures and terrors, the jubilations and laments, of a life both profoundly sensed and gracefully examined.
Frank X. Gaspar is the author of four books of poetry - The Holyoke, Mass for the Grace of a Happy Death, A Field Guide to the Heavens and Night of a Thousand Blossoms - as well as the novel Leaving Pico (UPNE). His writing has won numerous awards and prizes, including a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Poetry, the 1988 Morse Poetry Prize, the 1994 Anhinga Prize, the 1999 Brittingham Prize, a California Arts Council Fellowship in Poetry, the California Book Award, and a Barnes and Noble Discover Award. Gaspar's work has appeared widely in magazines and journals throughout the country, and he has been included in multiple editions of the Best American Poetry and Pushcart Prize anthologies. Born and raised in Provincetown, Massachusetts, he holds a Masters of Fine Arts degree in Creative Writing from University of California, Irvine. He now lives in Southern California.

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