Triptych disrupts conventions of book authorship. Between two covers are three books, The Three-Legged World by Peter Grandbois, In Time by James McCorkle, and Orpheus & Echo by Robert Miltner. Of course, books converse with other books, and poetry, rippling from unmeasured sound into rampant forms, is especially polyphonic. Etruscan brings these three books together because they exerted upon our editors a gravitational pull, causing the shadow of one to fall across the reading of another. Sufficient on their own, these books achieve new altitudes when aligned. Triptych launches no school. It backs no cause. What these books share is not easily labeled. None follows narrative conventions. None dwells on confession. None abides predictable meter. None is easily parsed. Each climbs eerie heights where ego finds no purchase. Each takes a kaleidoscopic view of selfhood. Each takes flight toward apotheosis. Each blesses the moments "Before we turn into air," or give way to "tongue of trees, language of clouds," and before "Gods and dogs begin their talking back," before birds "are falling through their late bodies." In Miltner's ogham-deep caesuras, in McCorkle's speech-song, and in Grandbois's cadences which whisper like ghostly passersby, "sound is emanation," and emanation asks, "what would this line be without the words?"
The poems in this collection by Lucy Maud Montgomery were written to reach the readers she thought of as "kindred spirits" - those thousands of people who then, as now, would be as deeply moved as she was by beauty in nature and in spirit.
... lines that, like so many magicians, conjure a rabbit there for her pleasure Spark-charged Jim, he'd throw off nine new ideas a minute; most were wildly impractical or even silly but some, some were ingenious; he could shower sparks ...
An anthology of short stories and poems by Edgar Allan Poe including "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," "The Purloined Letter," "Annabel Lee," and "The Raven."
Edgar Allan Poe: Short Stories, Poems, Novels
Presents a collection of tales from Edgar Allan Poe in an illustrated format by prominent artists working in the fields of comics, book illustration, and fine arts.
So today I board the later , slower Matthew J. Hughes to do just that , fetch the burgeoning language . At the moment , the sun at stern , David's latest postcard , a Tapies collage sent from Barcelona marking the page I was reading ...
Laura Ingalls Wilder shares her vision of the fanciful, ethereal, and mischievous world of the "Little People" in this first-ever collection of fairy poems she wrote in 1915.
And not the least of this book's disconcerting, but strangely salutary, powers is that, under its stimulus, you can't help starting back.
Selected Poems: in Five Sets
This book also makes available a full index of poem titles to assist scholars, students, and critics in finding and contextualizing Gilman's poetry.