Winter Tenor

By Goodan, Kevin

Publishers Summary:
"Goodan's poems search for the holy in the ordinary. . . . His poems risk the big questions: the nature of death and nature of life. . . . The musicality of his language resonates with intelligence and intensity. . . . These poems are filled with a wintry light, a light that is at once cold and harsh but transcendent in its clarity. A necessary second volume; highly recommended for contemporary poetry collections."—Library Journal "Granted, delightedly, its Keatsian pressures, compressions and urgency, Kevin Goodan's Winter Tenor is no 'cold pastoral.' No indeed; these poems choir a warm sound from the barest branches and stir the embers of dark flames ablaze. Here is the soul of heat driven straight through the roots and veins of this old world."—Donald Revell In Kevin Goodan’s second collection, nature is equally cruel to all, and yearning is subsumed by an acceptance as terrible as it is beautiful. These poems are ecstatic, musical prayers, finding God in the details as well as the void. [Untitled] Ducks in a daze with mourning doves—Sweetness of the hay fresh mown, the cloudsSlowly stacking, the constantRevectoring of flocks among weeds,A dampness to northern aspects of fieldsSlanting toward the river, workmenSilent, workwomen finding shade, what remainsOf harvest not mattering as one thing bears downUpon the other—some wind in ornamental trees,The waxy mane of the whitest mare, whitestFrom the oncoming weather-light, the foalThat does not shy from the hand that gelded it. Kevin Goodan's first book, In the Ghost-House Acquainted (Alice James Books) won the 2005 L. L. Winship/PEN New England Award. His poems have appeared in Ploughshares and American Poet, among others, and he has taught creative writing at the University of Connecticut and Wesleyan University. He is an assistant professor at Lewis-Clark State College, and he lives on a bluff overlooking the Clearwater River.

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ISBN
978-1-88229-575-3
Publisher
Alice James Books


REVIEWS

Library Journal

Reviewed on March 15, 2009

Part pastoral, part liturgy, part litany, and part phenology, Goodan's poems search for the holy in the ordinary, for little births in the body of deaths, for the light in the dark of winter. His poems risk the big questions: the nature of death and nature of life, how closely one resembles the other, how one can be found in the other: "Is to know death is a place/ And each thing...Log In or Sign Up to Read More

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