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Practicing to Walk Like a Heron: Poems [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x153x13 mm, kaal: 297 g, 1 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2013
  • Kirjastus: Wayne State University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0814334539
  • ISBN-13: 9780814334539
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x153x13 mm, kaal: 297 g, 1 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2013
  • Kirjastus: Wayne State University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0814334539
  • ISBN-13: 9780814334539
Teised raamatud teemal:

In Practicing to Walk Like a Heron multiple-award-winning Michigan poet Jack Ridl shares lines of well-earned wisdom in the face of a constantly changing world. The familiar comforts of life-a warm fire in winter, a lush garden in summer-become the settings for transcendent and universal truths in these poems, as moments of grief, sadness, and melancholy trigger a deeper appreciation for small but important joys. The simple clarity of Ridl's lines and diction make the poems accessible to all readers, but especially rewarding for those who appreciate carefully honed, masterful verse.

Many of the poems take solace in nature-quiet deer outside in the woods, deep snow, a thrush's empty nest in the eaves-as well as man-made things in the world-a steamer trunk, glass jars, tea cups, and books piled high near an easy chair. Yet Ridl avoids becoming nostalgic or romantic in his surroundings, and shows that there is nothing easy in his celebration of topics like "The Letters," "But He Loved His Dog," "A Christmas List for Santa," and "The Enormous Mystery of Couples." An interlude of full-color pages divides Ridl's more personal poems with a section of circus-themed pieces, adding visions of elephants, trumpets, tents, sequins, and sideshows, and the uniquely travel-weary perspectives of jugglers, trapeze artists, roustabouts, and clowns.

Practicing to Walk Like a Heron unabashedly affirms the quirky and eccentric, the small and mundane, and the intellectual and experiential in life. This relatable and emotionally powerful volume will appeal to all poetry readers.

Muu info

Commended for IndieFab awards (Poetry) 2013 and Midwest Book Award (MIPA) (Poetry) 2014.
Acknowledgments xi
"Write to Your Unknown Friends"
1(4)
1 From Our House to Your House
It's Hard to Know Where to Begin
5(1)
From Our House to Your House
6(2)
Growing Up in a Small Town
8(1)
Easter, 1948
9(2)
Hands
11(1)
Ridl Was Once Spelled Hridl
12(1)
A Midsummer Night's Dream
13(2)
My Father Was in Love with Peggy Lee
15(2)
Open to the Psalms
17(1)
The Steps of Pittsburgh
18(1)
It Wasn't Folklore
19(1)
Thinking of Yahweh During a Winter Thaw
20(1)
On My Parents' Sixty-fifth Wedding Anniversary
21(1)
An Afternoon Visiting My Mother in Assisted Living
22(2)
The Days
24(1)
A New Beginning
25(2)
The Letters
27(2)
Fractals: A Nocturne
29(1)
Searching Again for My Father
30(5)
2 The Enormous Mystery of Couples
Suite For the Turning Year
35(5)
On Going with My Wife to Her Doctor
40(2)
The Enormous Mystery of Couples
42(2)
Theme and Variations
44(2)
Oh I Suppose
46(1)
Here in the Time Between
47(2)
Practicing to Walk Like a Heron
49(1)
Some Notes Taken While the Media Try to Come to Terms with the Life and Death of Michael Jackson
50(2)
With
52(2)
Morning Rounds
54(2)
Christmas, the Execution of Tookie Williams
56(1)
The Neighbors
57(2)
William Blake's Hiccoughs
59(1)
After Talking It Over
60(1)
Just Before He Had Another Panic Attack
61(1)
Mid-October Morning
62(1)
Ron Howard's on the Cover of AARP
63(2)
Take Love for Granted
65(2)
My Wife Has Sent Me an Email
67(2)
A Quiet Study in Black and Gray
69(1)
Speaking Objectively in Winter
70(2)
Raking the Duck Weed
72(1)
Putting Away the Santas
73(2)
Hardship in a Nice Place
75(1)
The End of This Year
76(1)
Have You Heard the One About?
77(1)
It's April and It Should Be Spring
78(1)
Epilogue
79(4)
Interlude: "Hey Skinny, the Circus Is in Town!"
Circus: Late Summer
83(2)
Outside the Center Ring
85(2)
Grouse of the Circus Boss
87(1)
After the Lion Tamer
88(2)
Sequins
90(2)
Daydreams of the Catcher of the Queen of the Air
92(2)
Suzie
94(2)
The Death of the Queen of the Air
96(2)
Circus Cook
98(3)
The End of the Fat Lady
101(2)
Death in the Dog Act
103(1)
The Children of the Lion Tamer
104(2)
Roustabout
106(2)
Clown
108(2)
The Balloon Man
110(2)
Night on the Circus Lot
112(2)
Winter Quarters
114(5)
3 The Hidden Permutations of Sorrow
The Two Chairs in the Garden
119(1)
What Are You Supposed to Do Anyway?
120(1)
Within the Moment of Indefinite Suffering
121(1)
The Hidden Permutations of Sorrow
122(1)
Listening to Chopin in Early Winter
123(1)
At the "As the Spirit Moves" Poetry Reading
124(1)
Instead of Planting Roses
125(1)
The Man Who Loved Mulch
126(2)
After Midnight: Insomnia's Solace
128(1)
A Man I Know
129(1)
"Moose. Indian"
130(1)
Several Old People Are Walking by Our Window
131(1)
A List of Possibilities in an Uncertain Order
132(1)
He Brings Home Everything
133(1)
Monet's "Winter on the Seine, Lavacourt"
134(1)
Preludes
135(2)
Another Puppet Show
137(4)
The Reunion
141(1)
The Dogs' Door Is at the Far End of the House
142(1)
The Artist to the Canvas
143(1)
A Christmas List for Santa
144(1)
But He Loved His Dog
145(2)
A Cabinet of Natural Curiosities
147(1)
The Yearling with the Broken Leg
148(2)
Another Day in Your Life
150(1)
The Knitters
151(1)
Drinking Black Tea Early in the Morning
152(2)
For Lenny
154(1)
A Generous Welcome
155(1)
After Spending the Morning Baking Bread
156(1)
Return to a Place I Don't Remember
157(1)
The Heron
158
Jack Ridl is the author of Broken Symmetry (Wayne State University Press, 2006), named best book of poetry for 2006 by The Society of Midland Authors, and of Losing Season, and is co-author with Peter Schakel of Approaching Literature. He is professor emeritus at Hope College, USA, where he was named Michigan's Professor of the Year in 1996 by the Carnegie (C.A.S.E.) Foundation. More than 75 of his students are now published authors.