Sycamore: Poems


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Description

FINALIST FOR THE KINGSLEY TUFTS AWARD

Meditative and richly written, this collection of poems by Kathy Fagan takes the sycamore as its inspiration--and delivers precise, luminous insights on lost love, nature, and the process of recovery.

"It is the season of separation & falling / Away," Fagan writes. And so--like the abundance of summer diminishing to winter, and like the bark of the sycamore, which sheds to allow the tree's expansion--the speaker of these poems documents a painful loss and tenuous rebirth, which take shape against a forested landscape. Black walnuts fall where no one can eat or smell them. Cottonwood sends out feverish signals of pollen. And everywhere are sycamores, informed by Fagan's scientific and mythological research--shedding, growing tall, pale, and hollow enough to accommodate a person. Fluidly metaphorical; filled with references to film, sculpture, and architecture; and linguistically playful--"Word games reveal a lot," says Fagan's speaker--these poems unflinchingly lay bare both the poetic process and an emotional one.

Spellbinding and ambitious--finding catharsis in wordplay and the humanity in nature--Sycamore is an important new work from a writer whose poems "gleam like pearls or slowly burning stones" (Philip Levine).



Author: Kathy Fagan
Publisher: Milkweed Editions
Published: 03/14/2017
Pages: 88
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.30lbs
Size: 7.80h x 5.80w x 0.40d
ISBN13: 9781571314734
ISBN10: 1571314733
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | Subjects & Themes | Nature
- Poetry | American | General
- Poetry | Women Authors

About the Author
Kathy Fagan is the author of four previous collections, including the National Poetry Series selection The Raft and the Vassar Miller Prize winner Moving & St Rage. Her work has appeared in the Paris Review, Kenyon Review, Slate, Field, Ploughshares, New Republic, and Missouri Review, among other literary magazines. She teaches at Ohio State University, where she is also the poetry editor of OSU Press, and advisor to The Journal.