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LAMP OF THE BODY
A01=MAGGIE SMITH
acceptance
american
Author_MAGGIE SMITH
Category=DC
contemporary poetry collection
courage
darkness
death
depression
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
experimental
grief
imagery
inspirational
language
light
loss
metaphor
modern poems
movement
place
poetic craft
precise
refreshing
storytelling
symbolism
voice
wisdom
woman poet
Product details
- ISBN 9781888996883
- Weight: 100g
- Dimensions: 127 x 228mm
- Publication Date: 15 Sep 2005
- Publisher: Red Hen Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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"Here in Maggie Smith’s first book we encounter a voice that is spare, confident, and precise. Her images click into place, and the movement of each poem is deft, muscular, taut. These are poems we trust, poems that ask hard questions while at the same time convincing us of the magic in the world. Smith’s voice is reserved, yet she carries her world forward in her teeth, so to speak. There’s wisdom and acceptance in many of the poems, coupled with a willingness to utter what she does not understand, a recognition 'that worse happens to better than I.' She embraces the mystery. There’s a kinship with the Ohio landscape, but also the recognition that 'darkness ploughs its furrows here.' These are poems that do not flinch in the face of grief while at the same time they do not give into formulas that either comfort or accuse. I admire the courage and the control, the gorgeous turns, the leaps she takes in the poems while keeping the center of each poem intact. These are poems that do not wobble; the voice is confident and secure, the authority claimed, and the darkness met head on—'mealy, and bitter' but as she writes in 'The Poem Speaks to Danger': 'I am the mouth/that can hold more . . . the globe // of some new, ready fruit.' This is a book that delights, intrigues, and instructs. A wonderful debut."
—Carol Potter
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