With craggy Celtic metaphysics and perfect linguistic pitch, R. T. Smith evokes the landscape, culture, and history of Ireland and the New World through the eyes and ears of an outsider. Words matter to Smith, and the language of these poems is knotty and precise, blazing into moments of recognition with the elliptical testimony and spare light of everyday objects: . . . adze and hammer, gate latch, cracked Baleek and a Claddagh brooch. It is this muted voice of perfection, speaking from the simple lines of Shaker furniture, that chills the speaker of “New Lebanon” as he reflects upon the religious sect’s “hard bargain / with God, their promise / to be virtue’s monsters.” Trespasser arcs with rigorous unity of vision from the secular to the heights of spiritual rapture, until the demarcation between world and spirit finally begins to blur. In a parable of the perfection in disorder, “Before the Breakup” juxtaposes the heartbreak of parting against the discovery of a bee embalmed in a jar of bramble jam. And “Passage to Kilronin,” a meditation on the drowning of a boy from one of the local trawlers, eloquently voices the notion of cosmic kinship. The collection ends on an eerily pastoral note with the crepuscular, self-composed epitaph of St. Gristle, a holy madman: I will be love’s gallows, all sap and marrow, mad lament of shadows and a mouthful of birds dying to sing. Surely, this book suggests, between world and spirit there is, for those who can see, no demarcation at all. Trespasser is a dazzling, passionate collection, certain to delight and move any reader who has an ear for the music of language played by a virtuoso.
The case that will make Detective Antoinette Conway's murder squad career. Or break it. There's the murder squad you set your sights on, back at the beginning of your career:...
D. H. Lawrence Delphi Classics. D. H. LAWRENCE. IN 59 VOLUMES Parts Edition Contents The Novels 1, The White Peacock 2, The Trespasser 3, Sons and Lovers 4, The Rainbow 5, Women in Love 6, The Lost Girl 7, Mr Noon 8, Aaron's Rod 9, ...
The bestselling novel by Tana French, author of the forthcoming novel The Searcher, is “required reading for anyone who appreciates tough, unflinching intelligence and ingenious plotting” (The New York Times).
Set in the hills of Kentucky, Edra Ziesk’s third novel deals with boundaries and ownership, visible and invisible, present and past. It is the gripping story of what happens to...
With vivid storytelling, Trespassers? uncovers suburbia as an increasingly important place for immigrants and minorities to register their claims for equality and inclusion.
Whether the trespasser is a threat or simply a lost wanderer, one thing is obvious: maintaining their simple existence will come with a sacrifice, perhaps even the ultimate one."--Page 4 of cover.
The second in the epic Ferryman paranormal romance trilogy with film rights optioned by Legendary Entertainment.
That Christmas, as always, they traveled to the big city to attend the grandparents' celebration. A beer-basted turkey with all the trimmings highlighted the meal, and of course, the Grandmother's egg nog made the perfect after-dinner ...
It was the sitting-room of a mean house standing in line with hundreds of others of the same kind along a wide road in South London. Now and again the...
Cardwell Beware The Cardwell clan has a new, mysterious member.