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New Books from NER Authors

June 18, 2012

Sarah Manguso 

The Guardians

“Manguso’s writing manages, in carefully honed bursts of pointed, poetic observation, to transcend the darkness and turn it into something beautiful.”—Heller McAlpin, Barnes and Noble

 

 

 

Traci Brimhall

Our Lady of the Ruins

Winner of the 2011 Barnard Women Poets Prize, Our Lady of the Ruins tracks a group of women through their pilgrimage in a mid-apocalyptic world.  Exploring war, plagues, and the search for a new God in exile, these poems create a chorus of wanderers haunted by empire, God, and personal trauma.

“…part Dylan Thomas, part saint’s legend and part Tolkien.” —Publishers Weekly Review

 

Lucia Perillo

Happiness Is a Chemical in the Brain: Stories

“Lucia Perillo isn’t just a strikingly original poet; she’s a top-notch fiction writer as well. The stories in this bleakly funny and harrowing collection are reminiscent of both Raymond Carver and Denis Johnson, but the vision than animates them is Perillo’s own, unique and unmistakable.” —Tom Perrotta

 

 

On the Spectrum of Possible Deaths

“Perillo’s poetic persona is funny, tough, bold, smart, and righteous. A spellbinding storyteller and a poet who makes the demands of the form seem as natural as a handshake, she pulls readers into the beat and whirl of her slyly devastating descriptions.”—Booklist

 

 

Ira Sadoff

True Faith

“Nowhere else in American poetry do I come across a passion, a cunning, and a joy greater than his. And a deadly accuracy. I see him as one of the supreme poets of his generation.”–Gerald Stern

 

 

 

Charles Holdefer

Back in the Game

“(Holdefer’s) funny novel describes a maturing pro athlete’s often bumpy transition from youthful dreams to mainstream American life.” —Publisher’s Weekly

 

 

Paisley Rekdal

Animal Eye

“Paisley Rekdal’s quiet virtuosity with rhyme and cadence, her syntactic fidelity to thought and sensation, her analytical intelligence that keeps homing in and in, her ambitious sentences and larger formal structures that try to embody with absolute accuracy the difference between what we ought to feel and what we really do feel—all these make her unique in her generation . . .”—Tom Sleigh

 

Michael Heller

This Constellation Is a Name: Collected Poems 1965-2010

From his early spare poems written in Spain to the recent ruminative work exploring language, tradition (often Jewish and diasporic) and the self, this book collects four decades of Michael Heller’s “tone perfect poems” as George Oppen described them. Enriched with the detailed landscapes of the phenomenal world and mind, This Constellation Is a Name confirms Michael Heller’s place at the forefront of contemporary American poetry.

Filed Under: NER Authors' Books, NER Community Tagged With: Animal Eye, Back in the Game, Charles Holdefer, Happiness Is a Chemical in the Brain, Ira Sadoff, Lucia Perillo, Michael Heller, On the Spectrum of Possible Deaths, Our Lady of the Ruins, Paisley Rekdal, Sarah Manguso, The Guardians, This Constellation Is a Name, Traci Brimhall, True Faith

Concord Free Press’s Experiment in Generosity-Based Publishing

April 2, 2012

Castle Freeman, Jr.’s new collection of short stories, Round Mountain has just been published by Concord Free Press, a new publisher dedicated to “generosity-based publishing.” Instead of paying for the book, its temporary holder is encouraged to donate to a number of different Hurricane Irene relief organizations (whose information is provided in its back pages). The book is designed to be passed onto a friend after it has been read, with each reader signing their name in a space provided. In other words, Round Mountain is a good excuse to create your own community of readers while also supporting the Vermont communities affected by Hurricane Irene.

Freeman’s twelve stories in Round Mountain include “Driving Around,” a piece that was first published in NER 26.4.

For more information, visit www.concordfreepress.com/roundmountain.

“Freeman’s beautifully cadenced dialogue is rich with humor, philosophic depth and a near-mythic sensibility.” – Publisher’s Weekly

Filed Under: NER Authors' Books, NER Community Tagged With: Castle Freeman Jr., Concord Free Press, Round Mountain

Recent Books by NER Authors

January 30, 2012

Todd Boss
Pitch

“In Pitch, Boss re-creates the world as music—one thinks of Frost, of Kay Ryan—that undoes us even as it enchants us. What a pleasure this book: what a gift.” —Jim Moore

Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Lucky Fish

“Nezhukumatathil’s fourth book is fascinated with the small mechanisms of being, whether natural, personal, or imagined. Everything from eating eels in the Ozark mountains to the history of red dye finds a rich life in her poems. […] Even as the poems jump from the Philippines to India to New York, they still take their time, stopping to notice that “there is no mystery on water/ greater than the absence of rust,” and to draw small but wonderful parallels: “I loved you dark & late. The crocus have found ways to push up & say this/ too.” —Publishers Weekly

Matt Bondurant
The Night Swimmer

“But when Bondurant explores what it is like to push yourself to the brink, whether with physical activity, drugs and alcohol, or lust, he captures an intensity of experience the reader won’t soon forget.” —BookPage

D. A. Powell
Useless Landscape, or A Guide for Boys


“No accessible poet of his generation is half as original, and no poet as original is this accessible.” —Stephen Burt, The New York Times Book Review

 

Filed Under: NER Authors' Books Tagged With: Aimee Nezhukumatathil, D.A. Powell, Lucky Fish, Matt Bondurant, Pitch, The Night Swimmer, Todd Boss, Useless Landscape

Jennifer Grotz Selected for NPR’s Top Five

January 26, 2012

For NPR, Gregory Orr chooses Jennifer Grotz‘s new collection, The Needle, as one of five best poetry books of 2011 in “Truth and Beauty: 2011’s Best American Poetry.” (Grotz’s poems “The Fog and “The Forest” appear in the current issue of NER.) Orr also recommends NER poetry editor C. Dale Young’s book Torn, because, as Orr writes, “no critic can refrain from recommending more books than he’s supposed to.”

One of the few things almost everyone can agree on about contemporary American poetry is that no one can agree on much. At present, poetry is a jumbled landscape, with no single, dominant style and few living figures whose importance is accepted in more than one or two of the art form’s tiny fiefdoms. Although some might find this state of affairs discouraging, I think there’s good reason to be optimistic — poetry often needs to undergo periods of confusion to achieve the clarity for which we’ll later remember it. Here are five books that suggest that even if American poetry isn’t entirely sure where it’s going, that doesn’t mean it’s gotten lost.

[read more]

Filed Under: NER Authors' Books, NER Community, News & Notes Tagged With: C. Dale Young, Gregory Orr, Jennifer Grotz, NPR Books, The Needle, Torn

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Vol. 42, No. 1

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Writer’s Notebook

Writer’s Notebook—Field Dress Portal

Sarah Audsley

Writer’s Notebook—Field Dress Portal

Writing this poem was not a commentary on a rivalry between the sister arts—poetry and painting—but more an experiment in the ekphrastic poetic mode.

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