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Aflame

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Aflame

Contributors:

By (Author) Gary McDowell

ISBN:

9781945680403

Publisher:

White Pine Press

Imprint:

White Pine Press

Publication Date:

23rd November 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

102

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 228mm

Description

Via both associative lyrics and disjunctive narratives, Aflame looks to the intersection of T/time and experience, sex and fatherhood, husbandry and the cosmos, and whether the experiences Aflame dictates are quotidian or ecstatic, these poems stabilize and arrest.

Reviews

Gary McDowell writes light can travel so fast/ but observation happens immediately which is probably insight into his great gift as a poet: McDowells ability to see into the world of things and work with them or against them. Alfame takes this level of observation and puts it to work in both sinuous and staccatod lines about the body and breath of his wife; his children; suburbia; a state park; aging; our political rights; and the city of Nashville where he lives. These poems move fluidly between narrative and fragmentation, between the body and the spirits flame. These are serious poems which seek to find, particularly in the long title poem, something about existence. This is poetry as ontology. Poetry as love letter. Something meandering between prayer and praise. It may sound corny but if not that ambitious, why even write The stakes are always high in McDowells poems. Or how he tells us, My daughters hand: how I know God is. Sean Thomas Dougherty, Judge 2019 White Pine Press Poetry Prize Reading these poems, I am more than myself. I am etymology and egg, am the mysterious rabbit hole of fact, am as massive and tiny as a star. This book has the patience of a stone and the urgency of a library on fire. It is the prayer I wish could be written in cursive on Gods ear. Traci Brimhall on Mysteries in a World That Thinks There Are None (Burnside Review Press, 2016) Not one line in this collection of dispatches does less than delight and amaze. McDowells poems are wise and hilarious. I couldnt stop reading them. David Dodd Lee on Weeping at a Strangers Funeral (Dream Horse Press, 2014) Weeping at a Strangers Funeral has done the impossiblemade an odyssey of the mind that is just as compelling as the eponymous one, only McDowell never leaves home. His ships and sorceresses and capricious gods are domestic. In this amazing undertaking, the poet regards his life, addressing his imagination,thrilling us with aphorisms that pierce and pervert. Pigeons cant tell the difference between night and a vision of night, McDowell writes. The difference makes no difference, he suggests, and thats what makes this book, which is both odyssey and tapestry, poetry at its best. Larissa Szporluk on Weeping at a Strangers Funeral (Dream Horse Press, 2014)

Author Bio

Gary McDowell is the author of a collection of lyric essays, Caesura: Essays (Otis Books/Seismicity Editions, 2017) and five collections of poetry, including, most recently, Mysteries in a World that Thinks There Are None (Burnside Review Press, 2016) and Weeping at a Strangers Funeral (Dream Horse Press, 2014). He lives in Nashville, TN with his wife and two kids where hes an associate professor of English at Belmont University.

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