ISLAND
By (Author) Jeanette Clough
Red Hen Press
Red Hen Press
2nd May 2006
United States
General
Non Fiction
Literary studies: poetry and poets
811
Paperback
88
Width 152mm, Height 215mm, Spine 5mm
136g
In Island, Jeanette Clough invites readers to explore several beautiful and illustrious lands--from Los Angeles to Southeast Asia--while inspiring wonder and emotion through her rich use of language. Her poems capture not only the splendor of natural landscapes, but the passions and desires that run through us all.
The poems in Jeanette Marie Cloughs Island are insistent testaments to the ability of precise observation to reveal the emotional secrets that lie under surfaces. Often dazzling, always smart, they transport the reader to many placesSoutheast Asia, Scotland, the California desert, the neighborhoods of greater Los Angelesevery landscape meticulously dressed in the names of its rocks, flora, colors, tastes, and sounds. Yet, it is the familiar islands of yearning, anguish, anonymity, and disillusion, whose scenery is beyond description, to which Clough ultimately brings us in these poems, in a language that is both brilliant and startling in the depth of its concern and understanding.
David Oliveria
Jeanette Clough's elegant language, fluid craft, vivid intellect and precise heart make Island a stunning meditation on place, self and Other. All the poems shine, particularly "Letters from Atlantis," a series rich with desire and surrender, with the poetic enchantment we've come to expect from this wonderful poet. She draws us magically into the true home of lyric poetry, between the actual and the ephemeral: "...where space is thin and I can walk right through.
Holly Prado
Jeanette Clough shows us that the world in its many places and parts is one world, if looked at simply, rightly. To make art, we must pay close attention to the world in its elemental and everyday details. Jeanette Clough does this wonderfully in these new poems, always focused on the small but essential meanings that might be revealed to us. And with and eye for our common history lost or yet t come she offers a vision and language that reach for transcendence.
Christopher Buckley
Jeanette Cloughs meticulous observations, and her elaborations of the particular, always remind me of those of Elizabeth Bishop. Just as Bishops compassionate, unromantic, delicate and generous scrutiny of the natural world made possible the revelation of an equally complex interior world, so too do Jeanette Cloughs passages through landscape and circumstances reflect the interior complexity of a brilliant and incisive observer. Jeanette Cloughs poems are inevitably songs of ones place in the world, of ones constantly shifting place in both the natural world and the world desired in ones heart and imagination.
David St. John