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New and Collected Poems

1975-2015

Jay Parini

$55

Hardback

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English
Beacon Press
01 September 2018
"A new book, the first in over a decade, from acclaimed poet Jay Parini

This volume revolves around his deep connection to nature and underlines his concerns about the impacts of pollution and climate change. In these beautiful, haunting poems, Parini writes about the landscapes of mining country, of the railroads of Pennsylvania, of farm country, of worlds lost and families dispersed. He explores faith and how it is tested. He limns the deepest crevices of the human heart and soul. He surprises and moves us.

In addition to a complete volume's worth of new work, called West Mountain Epilogue, offering more than fifty poems never before published in any form, Parini has collected the very best work from his previous four volumes, the poems, as he tells us, ""written in the past forty years that I wish to stand by.'

Lavishly and deservingly praised over the decades for his work as an essayist, critic, biographer, novelist, and, especially, poet, Parini shines as never before in this generous volume."
By:  
Imprint:   Beacon Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 236mm,  Width: 157mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   490g
ISBN:   9780807030134
ISBN 10:   0807030139
Pages:   248
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Author’s Note NEW POEMS: WEST MOUNTAIN EPILOGUE (2006-2015) The Language of Mines Spring Snow Over the River West Mountain Epilogue Home A Knock at Midnight His Morning Meditations Snowday in Pittston A Dream of Stones Lackawanna Rail A Night in the Field Happy Hour In the Library After Hours Some Effects of Global Warming in Lackawanna County Below Zero The Language of Mines The Grammar of Affection Historiography 101 The Grammar of Affection To Ezra Pound Song and Skin Unpatriotic Gore The Lost Poems Toward a Poetics of the Next Generation Poem with Allusions Lend an Ear Hunch Revolutionary Days Bitch My Tongue At the Opening Ars Poetica Woman by the Way The Interruption of Summer A Single Page Ordinary Time Magi Heat Lightning Belief Sisters of No Mercy Midrash Aristotle in the Middle Ages The Poor at Heart The Dissolution Ordinary Time Creed God’s Operation on Adam The Insomniac Thinks of God Dead Reckoning Lament of the Middle Man Spring Burials Eternal Tailor Do Lord Remember Old Frogs Blessings from THE ART OF SUBTRACTION (1998-2005) After the Terror The Prophets The Lost Soldiers Occupied Country Sleeping Through the Storm Listening to the BBC World Service Late at Night The President Eats Breakfast Alone Democracy Fish-Eye View Peaches High School Family Reunion Covenant in April Old Teams Rise The Broken Neck Leo The Trees Are Gone Borges in Scotland Mind Power Stations Near Old Meldrum, After a Funeral The Crucifixion Late Thoughts The Art of Subtraction from HOUSE OF DAYS (1989-1998) Stars Falling Swimming After Thoughts Rain Before Nightfall The Lake House in Autumn Willow Song The Discipline of Seeing A Killing Frost Who Owns the Land? Nature Revisited House of Days The Lost Scent At School Keyser Valley: 1963 To My Father in Late September The Crow-Mother Tells All The Small Ones Leave Us New Morning Adrift Demonial House on Fire The Ruined House A Conversation in Oxford Good Friday in Amalfi Still Life Near Pitlochry I Was There from TOWN LIFE (1983-1988) The Mariner Syrinx The Visitors Differentiation Crops History Goodnight, Goodnight In the Sphere of Common Duty Reading Through the Night Skiing Home at Dusk Town Life Suburban Swamp The Function of Winter A Lost Topography Passing Through Vermont on Three Martinis America Portrait of the Artist as an Old Man Portrait of the Artist Underground Divine Parameters Solstice, Entering Capricorn This Kampuchea At the Ice Cream Parlor Grandmother in Heaven At the Ruined Monastery in Amalfi from ANTHRACITE COUNTRY (1975-1982) The Sabine Farm Beginning the World Walking the Trestle Playing in the Mines 1913 The Missionary Visits Our Church in Scranton The Miner’s Wake Coal Train Tanya Snake Hill Working the Face The Lackawanna at Dusk Anthracite Country The Rain School The Salt Lick Learning to Swim Berry-Picking The Sea Lily Amores (After Ovid) In the Meadow Seasons of the Skin Swimming in Late September Winter of the Dog This Scrying To His Dear Friend, Bones Sleepers Her Sadness After the Summer Heroes This Reaping Skater in Blue Summer People Black Week Illimitable Kingdom Near Aberdeen High Gannet

Jay Parini is a poet, novelist, biographer, and critic. His five books of poetry include Anthracite Country and House of Days. He has written eight novels, including Benjamin's Crossing, The Apprentice Lover, The Passages of H.M., and The Last Station-the last was made into an Academy Award-nominated film starring Helen Mirren and Christopher Plummer. Parini has written biographies of John Steinbeck, Robert Frost, William Faulkner, and, most recently, Gore Vidal. His nonfiction works include Jesus- The Human Face of God, Why Poetry Matters, and Promised Land- Thirteen Books That Changed America.

Reviews for New and Collected Poems: 1975-2015

Praise for Jay Parini Jay Parini is one of those writers who can do anything. --Stacy Schiff, New York Times Book Review His poems are fully imagined and highly accomplished. He never fails to astonish with his grace and wisdom. --James Merrill Jay Parini brings to the current poetic scene a classical sense of order. His impeccable poems burn with the tension between clearheaded intelligence and basic empathy with the human condition. --Richard Eberhart This is keen-eyed, thoughtful, artful yet unaffected poetry. I am struck by the honesty of Jay Parini's desires and ignorances--his forthright longing for transcendence, his forthright fear that it may not happen. --Richard Wilbur Jay Parini expresses the best in American poetry. --Anne Stevenson Warm, accepting, peacemaking poems, with sudden jumps of articulate delight in them...The [poems] abound in grace--grace of attitude, grace of language. --Alastair Reid Praise for New and Collected Poems: 1975-2015 [Parini] always leaves room for small delights or for glorious surprises. --Christian Science Monitor Parini is truly a man of letters. He is a biographer of Gore Vidal, William Faulkner, and Robert Frost, among other writers; a poet; and a novelist whose subjects include Herman Melville in The Passages of H.M. (2010). For this collection, he explains, he selected 'poems written in the past forty years that I wish to stand by, ' works from The Art of Subtraction (2005), House of Days (1998), Town Life (1988), and Anthracite Country (1982). But first readers will discover a set of new poems under the title 'West Mountain Epilogue.' In these supple, straight-ahead lyrics, Parini evokes a strong sense of place as he remembers the Pennsylvania of his youth and his 'very poor' grandmother who lived so richly on a 'tiny farm' in Pennsylvania with her chickens: 'I used to watch her scattering the grain / like John D. Rockefeller scattered dimes.' The title poem spotlights the grim truth about Scranton's 'soot-rain, ' 'coal dust, ' 'white plastic trash, ' and 'redbrick buildings with their broken teeth, ' while Parini also celebrates 'Lackawanna light.' Parini describes snow softening harsh terrain, sleeping outdoors as a boy, innocence, and hope, and he writes ruefully about our present predicaments, in poems such as 'Some Effects of Global Warming in Lackawanna County.' He also prophesies: 'The poetry of tomorrow will not be pretty.' As for now, Parini offers graceful and wry spiritual reflections in a number of prayerful poems, including 'Do Lord Remember' and 'Blessings.' --Donna Seaman, Booklist Online Admired master of many genres, including novels, biographies, and essays, it is in his poetry that I've always felt Jay Parini comes into his own, using his astonishing and wide-ranging talent to mine the deeper ground. In his poetry, we get the full strength of all we admire in this writer: the springs of his lyricism, his keen eye for detail, his absorbing and compassionate curiosity about people and places, an ability to listen and capture the tone of our times, and moral imagination and spiritual yearning that delivers us into a larger way of seeing and being. New and Collected Poems gathers together four decades of work: we follow him from his childhood in coal country to his full maturity in the Green Mountains, a journey that is a pilgrimage to the waters and watering place of his being, and ours. It's the book I've always wanted from this author, the one I will read, reread, and give as a gift to others who care about literature that matters and will endure. --Julia Alvarez, author of novels, short stories, nonfiction, memoir, including In the Time of the Butterflies, How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, and A Wedding In Haiti, as well as several books of poetry, most recently, The Woman I Kept to Myself


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