To the wren Collected & new poems 1991-2019

Jane Mead, 1958-

Book - 2019

"This collection houses Mead's life's work: seven books spanning twenty-seven years. Follow chronologically through decades and become captivated by heartfelt muses on loss, madness, danger, grief, isolation, and self-identity. Her poems explore spaces we often try to ignore and finds a comfortable middle-ground. Mead candidly and openly weaves together pain and joy until it meshes into glimpses of humanity"--

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Farmington, ME : Alice James Books [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Jane Mead, 1958- (author)
Item Description
Includes indexes.
Physical Description
583 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781948579018
  • A truck marked flammable (1991)
  • The Lord and the general din of the world (1996)
  • House of poured-out waters (2001)
  • The usable field (2008)
  • Money money money ; Water water water (2014)
  • World of made and unmade (2016)
  • New poems (2019).
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With lyric candor and emotional precision, Mead (World of Made and Unmade) offers her family history, meditations on loss and madness, and the landscape of California wine country in this collected volume. Bringing together seven collections written over three decades, this book makes room for the many facets of Mead's talents to shine. Her father's struggles with addiction-along with the profound impact these struggles have on her family-are documented in Mead's debut collection and reconsidered after his death, leading to meditative exploration of grief and remembrance. Mead bears witness to her mother through a child's eyes, then, decades later, through the slow process of her mother's dying. A new poem asks "Do we ever really get to go beyond the story/ we were born to." (For the speaker of these poems, the answer is a resounding no.) Still, the natural world, in its bounty and brutality, is a grounding force for Mead, a reminder of a time scale beyond the human span. In her commitment to representing experience faithfully, Mead engages fundamental questions about the nature of knowing. Through observation, philosophy, math, science, and prayer, the reader is witness to a mind that submits itself to the world with curiosity and humility in order to see things as they really are. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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