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Dark Wild Realm by Michael Collier — book cover
Poetry - General & Miscellaneous, American Poetry

Dark Wild Realm

by Michael Collier
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Overview

The award-winning poet Michael Collier’s elegiac fifth collection is haunted by spectral figures and a strange, vivid chorus of birds: From a cardinal that crashes into a window to a gathering of turkey vultures, Collier engages birds as myth-makers and lively messengers, carrying memories from lost friends. The mystery of death and the vital absence it creates are the real subjects of the book. Collier juxtaposes moments of quotidian revelation, like waking to the laughing sounds of bird song, with the drama of Greek tragedy, taking on voices from Medea. As Vanity Fair praised, his poems “tread nimbly between moments of everyday transcendence and spiritual pining.”

Synopsis

The award-winning poet Michael Collier’s elegiac fifth collection is haunted by spectral figures and a strange, vivid chorus of birds: From a cardinal that crashes into a window to a gathering of turkey vultures, Collier engages birds as myth-makers and lively messengers, carrying memories from lost friends. The mystery of death and the vital absence it creates are the real subjects of the book. Collier juxtaposes moments of quotidian revelation, like waking to the laughing sounds of bird song, with the drama of Greek tragedy, taking on voices from Medea. As Vanity Fair praised, his poems “tread nimbly between moments of everyday transcendence and spiritual pining.”

The Washington Post - Frances Phillips

The poet's stance in Dark Wild Realm is both alert and unsettled. His writing seeks the unstable spaces between light and shadow, waking and sleep, spirit and body, and the places where the living and dead pass one another. It's a midlife book in the best possible sense -- a continued questioning, some sobering knowledge and an openness to what's next.

About the Author, Michael Collier

Michael Collier has been the director of the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference for five years and has taught English at the University of Maryland, College Park, for fifteen years. His previous volumes of poetry are THE CLASP AND OTHER POEMS, THE FOLDED HEART, THE NEIGHBOR, and most recently THE LEDGE, finalist for the Los Angeles Times Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Collier is the recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship, NEA fellowships, and the Discovery/The Nation Award, among other honors. He resides in Maryland.

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Editorials

Frances Phillips

The poet's stance in Dark Wild Realm is both alert and unsettled. His writing seeks the unstable spaces between light and shadow, waking and sleep, spirit and body, and the places where the living and dead pass one another. It's a midlife book in the best possible sense -- a continued questioning, some sobering knowledge and an openness to what's next.
— The Washington Post

Publishers Weekly

In the 38 intense but prosaic lyrics, Collier, a National Book Critic's Circle Award finalist, invokes an ominously mythic vision of reality reminiscent of the work of Ted Hughes. Poems centered on birds ("something bold, big-billed, and broad towered above them") alternate with reflections on the mysterious operations of nature, invocations of the dead ("Dangerously frail is what his hand was like/ when he showed up at our house,/ three or four days after his death") and intimate recollections of love: "Look how far into the day we've moved// and yet we're still in bed, awake, silent." Collier (The Ledge, 2002) is at his most arresting when these solemn meditations give way to metaphor, as in "Invocation to the Heart," in which Romeo and Juliet become figures of love's difficult awakenings: "Remember that each of us/ lay dead awhile/ waiting for the other." (Apr. 2) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2007
Publisher
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Pages
80
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780618919918

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