Flemish
By (Author) Caroline Knox
Wave Books
Wave Books
9th July 2013
United States
Hardback
64
Width 177mm, Height 241mm
326g
Knox receives wide acclaim for her work but remains an undiscovered icon of American poetry. Her newest collection supports her role as a contemporary poetic master, championed by peers such as James Merrill and C.D. Wright.
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Knox has been a fellow at Harvard and holds strong academic connections in the Northeast.
will appeal to readers interested in the play of languagein translation, mis-translation, regional dialectics, Greek drama, texting and emailsrevealing new and surprising tensions between linguistic registers.
offers a lot to readers who enjoy sophisticated wordplay, Knox's uncanny humor makes her poems also accessible to a wide range of readers.
attends to present life and the immediate world, and Knox's distinct personality is ever-present in each piece.
promises high-energy academic discussion through her association with other contemporary experimental writers like Susan Howe and Rae Armantrout.
By turns funny, esoteric, and absurdist, Flemish is also positively enthralling, an energetic paean to language, the object, and the history of language and of objects. —Seth Abramson, Huffington Post Knox dresses her speakers and her cacophony of subjects (sister, otters, Dickinson, Mary Wesley) in whatever clothes history hands them (or she conjures up), letting them act out their roles on a spindle of wordplay and pathos. —Publishers Weekly
Caroline Knox's Nine Worthies was published by Wave Books in 2010. Quaker Guns (Wave Books, 2008) received a Recommended Reading Award 2009 from the Massachusetts Center for the Book. He Paves the Road with Iron Bars, published by Verse Press in 2004, won the Maurice English Award 2005 for a book by a poet over 50. A Beaker: New and Selected Poems appeared from Verse Press in 2002. Her previous books are The House Party and To Newfoundland (Georgia 1984, 1989), and Sleepers Wake (Timken 1994). Her work has appeared in American Scholar, Boston Review, Harvard, Massachusetts Review, New Republic, Paris Review, Ploughshares, Poetry (whose Bess Hokin Prize she has won), TriQuarterly, The Times Literary Supplement, and Yale Review. Her poems have been in Best American Poetry (1988 and 1994), and on Poetry Daily. She has received awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ingram Merrill Foundation, the Massachusetts Cultural Council (1996, 2006), The Fund for Poetry, and the Yale/Mellon Visiting Faculty Program. She was the judge for the Alice Fay DiCastagnola Award of the Poetry Society of America in Spring 2003, and was a Visiting Fellow at Harvard in 2003-2004. With Matthea Harvey and Peter Gizzi, she was a judge of the James Laughlin Award 2007.