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Synopsis
The speakers of Christopher Locke's WAITING FOR GRACE & OTHER POEMS regard despair as an affront, something to be resisted as if one's life depended on it: "we always tried to make sense of it all, //even as the day turned cold and late, even as/dusk called the first stars up out of their graves." "These are honest and beautiful-sometimes wrenching-poems. Immaculately crafted, they are full of fresh metaphors and language, yet, at the same time, absolutely clear. I so admire them. -- Patricia Fargnoli "Christopher Locke is a poet with huge imaginative and metaphorical gifts, i.e., his imagination is poetic. An angry Nun stands over his speaker in the third grade '...her skirt as black/as a tornado before it inhales a barn.' Or, (in the same poem!) a teenage ballplayer's body 'is loose as rainwater.' Visceral, lucid, original--Waiting for Grace is a terrific (in the colloquial as well as its original meaning) book." --Thomas Lux "The post-punk speaker of these poems, who confesses 'I am tired of the way I shine, ' and who declares his own shadow 'redundant, ' still musters awe while gazing upon his daughter's school bus, not to mention the 'dubious bling' of the natural world. Robins, quartz, ferns, dirtsong and pebble: the world outside is both a threat and a source of salvation. Christopher Locke's poems remember rage, and are nearly undone by regret, but prove faithful to pathos in the end."--Christopher BakkenBook Details
Published
February 1, 2013
Publisher
WordTech Communications LLC
Pages
58
Format
Large Print Paperback
ISBN
9781625490155