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Queer Nature – A Poetry Anthology

Michael Walsh

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English
Wiley
11 May 2022
An anthology of queer nature poetry spanning three centuries.

 

This anthology amplifies and centers LGBTQIA+ voices and perspectives in a collection of contemporary nature poetry. Showcasing over two hundred queer writers from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century, Queer Nature offers a new context for and expands upon the canon of nature poetry while also offering new lenses through which to view queerness and the natural world.

 

In the introduction, editor Michael Walsh writes that the anthology is “concerned with poems that speak to and about nature as the term is applied in everyday language to queer and trans bodies and identities . . . Queer Nature remains interested in elements, flora, fauna, habitats, homes, and natural forces—literary aspects of the work that allow queer and trans people to speak within their specific cultural and literary histories of the abnormal, the animal, the elemental, and the unnatural.” The anthology features poets including Elizabeth Bishop, Richard Blanco, Kay Ryan, Jericho Brown, Allen Ginsberg, Natalie Diaz, and June Jordan, as well as emerging voices such as Jari Bradley, Alicia Mountain, Eric Tran, and Jim Whiteside.

 

Edited by:  
Imprint:   Wiley
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 232mm,  Width: 151mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   590g
ISBN:   9781637680384
ISBN 10:   1637680384
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Wilderness of Flesh | Tory Adkisson What Use Is Knowing Anything If No One Is Around | Kaveh Akbar The River's Address | Kazim Ali Taking a Visitor to See the Ruins | Paula Gunn Allen A Vegetarian Goes to H Mart | Ally Ang Enskyment | Antler Encountering the Medusa | Gloria Anzaldúa Atrophied Prescript: | Aaron Apps Asleep You Become a Continent | Francisco Aragón Farmer's Almanac | Brent Armendinger Godzilla's Lament | Jubi Arriola- Headley Late Echo | John Ashbery We're Standing on the Sun | Derrick Austin Let me be a lamb in a world that wants my lion | Ruth Awad The Little Girl Is Busy Asking Questions about Desire | Cameron Awkward- Rich Inventory | Rick Barot The Dyke with No Name Thinks about Landscape | Judith Barrington Ground State | Samiya Bashir Kissing after Illness | Ellen Bass Prairie Dogs | Robin Becker Poet Wrestling with Why the Heart Feels So Bad | Rosebud Ben- Oni Outing, Iowa | Oliver Baez Bendorf Pastoral for Effective Teaching | Lillian- Yvonne Bertram Creatures of Hurt and Heal | Tamiko Beyer Song for the Rainy Season | Elizabeth Bishop Break Me To Prove I Am Unbroken | Sophie Cabot Black Burning in the Rain | Richard Blanco Swimming Hole | Sam Bonosevich Regarding the Absent Heat of Your Skin on Letters I Receive While at Sea | Elizabeth Bradfield Unruly | Jari Bradley in the cut | Julian Talamantez Brolaski Fast | Olga Broumas Lion | Jericho Brown Self- Portrait as Land Snail | Nickole Brown Hurricane Lyric | Matthew Burgess Home | Tara Shea Burke Hermit Crab | Stephanie Burt For the Feral Splendor That Remains | CAConrad Who Holds the Stag's Head Gets to Speak | Gabrielle Calvocoressi What I Would Give | Rafael Campo On Harvesting Oneself | Kayleb Rae Candrilli The Hummingbird | Cyrus Cassells Drown | Marcelo Hernandez Castillo Lesson of Bread | Jerah Chadwick Post Op | Judith Chalmer XXIV. | Jos Charles Elegy to Be Exhaled at Dusk | Chen Chen Dear O | Ching- In Chen Magnified | Justin Chin Wildlife | Franny Choi Desire as Blue Fog | Chrystos Twin Cities | James Cihlar [this the forest] | Cody- Rose Clevidence The Rock | Henri Cole Welcome to the Fall | Flower Conroy (An Orchid) | S. Brook Corfman To a Straight Man | Eduardo C. Corral Voyages | Hart Crane First Date, Hawk Mountain | James Crews Youth Sings a Song of Rosebud | Countee Cullen Once All the Hounds Had Been Called Home | Meg Day The Art of Butterflying | tatiana de la tierra These Hands, If Not Gods | Natalie Diaz Archaeopteryx | William Dickey Could I but ride indefinite | Emily Dickinson Wood and Rain | Melvin Dixon The Basilisk | Lynn Domina Deep Lane | Mark Doty Going Home | Qwo- Li Driskill Conception Myth | Cheryl Dumesnil Sonnet | Alice Moore Dunbar- Nelson Often I Am Permitted to Return to a Meadow | Robert Duncan Pervert | Julie R. Enszer Settling In | Jenny Factor Sex | Nikky Finney once a marine biologist told me octopuses have three hearts | Denice Frohman Ode to the Corpse Flower | Benjamin Garcia In Transit | R.J. Gibson Sunflower Sutra | Allen Ginsberg All at Sea | Sarah Giragosian pedicles, or this is where | Matty Layne Glasgow The Strangers Who Find Me in the Woods | Rigoberto González You Form | Rae Gouirand A Migration | Jan- Henry Gray Heaven and Earth | Miriam Bird Greenberg A Kingdom of Longing | Rachel Eliza Griffiths Not Children | Benjamin S. Grossberg Words for Some Ash | Thom Gunn Queerodactyl | Roy G. Guzmán The Sheltered Garden | H.D. Untitled | Marilyn Hacker The Valley of the Amazons | Eloise Klein Healy The Kiss | Christopher Hennessy Bottle Gentian | KateLynn Hibbard Shadows, Saddle Canyon | Jane Hilberry Grafted | Matthew Hittinger Idyll | Richie Hofmann Demand | Langston Hughes Tenor | Luther Hughes Elementary Departures | Christina Hutchins Primer | Jessica Jacobs A Stranger Asks Where I Am From | Charles Jensen Mesquites | Joe Jiménez Late Bloom | Jenny Johnson To a Strayed Cat | Stephen Jonas Golden Egg | Ever Jones Drag | Saeed Jones Letter to the Local Police | June Jordan purple | Britteney Black Rose Kapri Love Poem: Chimera | Donika Kelly Young Male | Maurice Kenny Conservation & Rehabilitation | Alyse Knorr Sweet Briar | Melissa Kwasny A Little Bit of Ocean | Joy Ladin Perianth | Gerrit Lansing Breathing You In | Joan Larkin Self- Portrait with Scoliosis (II) | Travis Chi Wing Lau A Southern Wind | Rickey Laurentiis Amphibians | Joseph O. Legaspi Love Two Times | Muriel Leung Thunder Cake | Mel Michelle Lewis I Came | Timothy Liu poem to my boyfriend’s human immunodeficiency virus | Chip Livingston Coal | Audre Lorde Falling, Falling, Then Rain, Then Snow | Su Smallen Love Grotesque | Amy Lowell Viscous | Ed Madden [Dear one, the sea . . . ] | Dawn Lundy Martin Dove Season | Michael Martella The Way the World Comes Back | Janet McAdams My Sideshow | J. D. McClatchy Coming Out in the Ozarks | Anne Haven McDonnell Know My Soul | Claude McKay Dear Canaries | Kevin McLellan América | Sarah María Medina For Two Lovers in the Year 2075 in the Canadian Woods | William Meredith The Lovers | James Merrill Sonnet IV | Edna St. Vincent Millay Eating a Mountain | Deborah Miranda Hemispheres | Susanna J. Mishler The Complete Tracker | Rajiv Mohabir Shared Plight | Kamilah Aisha Moon Real Curvature | Rachel Moritz Hawk like a Steeple | Alicia Mountain He Says, Oyster | Miguel Murphy [I always put my pussy] | Eileen Myles For the Era of Extraordinary Weather | Jim Nawrocki Changeling | Hieu Minh Nguyen To You | Frank O’Hara On Trans | Miller Oberman Wild Geese | Mary Oliver Three times on the trail, I looked back for you | Kate Partridge Toward | Juliet Patterson Thrush | Gerry Gomez Pearlberg Radiance versus Ordinary Light | Carl Phillips Nature Poem with a Compulsive Attraction to the Shark | Xan Phillips Migration | Carol Potter Landscape with Lymphatic System, System of Rivulets, System of Rivers | D. A. Powell Burning Water | Minnie Bruce Pratt Lost Season | Alison Prine Livestock | Khalisa Rae Backyard Rock | Jacques J. Rancourt Gerard Manley Hopkins Drafts the Light | Varun Ravindran Head of the Gorgon | Justin Phillip Reed uncoil | Rita Mae Reese Horses in Snow | William Reichard Memory as Missionary Position | No‘u Revilla heart of the bell | heidi andrea restrepo rhodes Diving into the Wreck | Adrienne Rich Backflash: Hinge | Elizabeth Lindsey Rogers Hero Worship | Dakota R. Rottino-Garilli How a Thought Thinks | Kay Ryan Fairy Tale | Sam Sax Await | James Schuyler Many Things Are True | Ruth L. Schwartz Woman Circling Lake | Maureen Seaton Unbearable White | Charif Shanahan I’m Over the Moon | Brenda Shaughnessy Geology of Water | Reginald Shepherd Boy with Flowers | Ely Shipley November 19, 2016 | Cedar Sigo Lovesong of the Square Root of Negative One | Richard Siken Love Letter to a Dead Body | Jake Skeets What’s Required | Aaron Smith alternate names for black boys | Danez Smith Closing the Gay Bar outside Gas City | Bruce Snider Queer Earth | Jess X. Snow The Joshua Tree // Submits Her Name Change | Christopher Soto For Mac | Jack Spicer Lifting Belly (II) | Gertrude Stein Tonawanda Swamps | James Thomas Stevens Visiting the Natural History Museum with the Son I Don’t Yet Have | Will Stockton The Exchange | May Swenson Estuary | Lehua M. Taitano Little Errand | Brian Teare Field Song | Amber Flora Thomas The War with the Dandelions | Bradford Tice Garden | Eric Tran the aftermath of what | Arianne True Beast Meridian | Vanessa Angélica Villarreal Instructions for Opening up the Heart | Irene Villaseñor Torso of Air | Ocean Vuong Butch Geography | Stacey Waite A Natural History of Gay Love | Michael Walsh The Third Measure Paused & Set to Your Breathing | Michael Wasson El Beso | Angelina Weld- Grimke Iowa | Valerie Wetlaufer Tail | Arisa White Skin Movers | James L. White Parable | Jim Whiteside Juneberry | Amie Whittemore This Compost | Walt Whitman A Poem for Trapped Things | John Wieners blackbody | Candace Williams First Words | Phillip B. Williams Root Sutra | Morgan Grayce Willow Turing’s Theories Regarding Homosexuality | Tobias Wray The Trick | Mark Wunderlich The Kiss | Yanyi The Gods among Us | C. Dale Young Flora and Fauna | Amanda Yskamp

Michael Walsh is the author of poetry books including The Dirt Riddles and Creep Love, as well as two chapbooks: Adam Walking the Garden and Sleepwalks. His poems and stories have appeared in journals such as The Journal, Chattahoochee Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, Cimarron Review, Crab Orchard Review,Great River Review, North Dakota Quarterly, and Prairie Schooner. He lives in Minneapolis and works as a curriculum administrator at the University of Minnesota.

Reviews for Queer Nature – A Poetry Anthology

This significant anthology features three centuries' worth of more than 200 LGBTQ poets' writing on the natural world. . . . This beautifully curated anthology reshapes the genre of nature poetry and awakens readers to its richness. * Publishers Weekly * '...In these pages, you will find the birds, the bees' as well as deer, gay bars, riverbanks, bedrooms, field, and forests.... habitats in which these poems lament and sing. * Edge Media Network * When heteronormativity prescribes a binary to everything it touches-something is either natural or unnatural-what a salve to reclaim and celebrate nature in its sprawling wonder and unfettered queerness. This is an invitation to readers who've long felt excluded from representations of the natural and pastoral. No longer stripped of its wildness and subtext, the nature reflected in these poems is the breadth of human experience: its complexities and aches, its trauma and desires, its richness and possibilities. Queer Nature understands nature resists constraint and simplification. It is boundless and borderless. It belongs to everyone. -- Ruth Awad, author of Set to Music a Wildfire Imagine my delight and pride in being a part of this anthology! Imagine your pleasure as you immerse yourself in this beauty of queerness! This is a must-have book for all. -- Chrystos, author of Fire Power, In Her I Am, and Not Vanishing This anthology makes visible the astonishing range and impact of queer poets. Page after page shimmers with emotional and intellectual pleasures-these poems will make you think, weep, sing, and sigh with relief. Walsh's remarkable curation reminds us what's natural has always been queer and what's queer is always natural. -- Eduardo C. Corral, author of Guillotine Queer Nature grew from one queer farm boy's longing for poetry that spoke to his complex love for the natural world he loved but to which, he was taught, love like his did not belong. Like a dowsing rod, this longing led Walsh to an underground poetic river, a heretofore obscure but essential American lyric tradition of conceiving, celebrating, and mourning nature. Gathering poets of innumerable ethnicities, histories, styles, and sexual and gender identifications, this book gives us access to a desperately needed aquifer of language that help us reimagine, revitalize, and repair our connection to the world we are destroying. -- Joy Ladin, author of The Future is Trying to Tell Us Something: New and Selected Poems and The Book of Anna Queer Nature is a vital anthology, generous in scope and elegantly cultivated Walsh. As I began reading Queer Nature, I started highlighting passages that illuminated for me new paths of understanding. Now the whole book is neon, glowing: Queer Nature-a moon, Queer Nature-a firefly, Queer Nature -a fish in the dark abyss shining its own extraordinary light. Reader, if you hold this surprising and luminous anthology close it just might guide you home. -- Alicia Mountain, PhD, author of High Ground Coward Queer people have had, are having, and will continue to have complicated relationships to nature, which is why this anthology of poems marks an important and nuanced contribution to our understanding of the nature poem. The real joy of Queer Nature, though, is the diversity of poems assembled here and their multifaceted renderings of nature, which challenge any simplistic understanding of the pastoral. By gathering these poems from the past 150 years in this long overdue and critically important anthology, Walsh has accomplished an incredible thing. -- Jacques J. Rancourt, author of Brocken Spectre and Novena The poems in Queer Nature investigate the ways we inhabit ourselves and our landscapes-everywhere unfurling, throwing roots, spores. Here, the ground is rich with worm and bone. Here, the concerns are both urgent and eternal. How do we locate the places where we can survive? How do we create them? And, ultimately, how will we create and recreate ourselves so we can thrive? -- Richard Siken, author of Crush and War of the Foxes I fell in love on nearly every page of Queer Nature. Sure, there is suffering to consider in our long journey into the light of acceptance and recognition, but what tumbles out of these poems again and again are affirmations of love and the reek of hope. This anthology is a homecoming. Readers will recognize many of these voices and be moved by the magnitude of the rich populous of queer eco-centric nature poets gathered here. I am less lonely, less terrified of my queerness, as I pour through these pages. This is a magnificent collection. -- Amber Flora Thomas, author of Eye of Water: Poems The poems in this remarkable collection work in both tandem and contradiction to make the irrefutable sound of queer ecologies. An aching intervention into the violent logics that position queerness as the antithesis of a natural world, Queer Nature says otherwise. The poems congeal, illuminating again and again that queer is nature. Queer is the animal. Queer are the hands 'moved like rivers.' Queer is the genre of the poem itself-its small and infinite ecosystem. -- Stacey Waite, author of Butch Geography


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