Trophic cascade

Camille T. Dungy, 1972-

Book - 2018

"Written in a time of massive environmental degradation, violence, and abuse of power, this book confronts the world in which we all must survive. Dwelling between vibrancy and its opposite, these poems are written in the face of despair to hold a commitment to hope."--

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
poetry
Poésie
Published
Middletown, Connecticut : Wesleyan University Press 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Camille T. Dungy, 1972- (author)
Edition
First paperback edition
Item Description
Poems.
Physical Description
74 pages ; 23 cm
Awards
"Winner of the 2018 Colorado Book Award in poetry"--Back cover
ISBN
9780819578563
9780819577191
  • Natural History
  • Before the fetus proves viable, a stroll creekside in the High Sierra
  • "still in a state of uncreation"
  • Ars Poetica: Mercator Projection
  • Ultrasound
  • Ars Poetica: Cove Song
  • Nullipara
  • Ars Poetica: Field Trip
  • Trophic Cascade
  • After Birth
  • Frequendy Asked Questions: #1
  • Frequendy Asked Questions: #2
  • Ars Poetica after William Carlos Williams
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #3
  • Ars Poetica Apocalyptica
  • Last Kiss
  • Glacial Erratics
  • Conspiracy
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #4
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #5
  • Ars Poetica: After the Dam
  • Mother daughter hour
  • Notes on what is always with us
  • There are these moments of permission
  • Because it looked hotter that way
  • Poor Translation
  • From the First, the Body Was Dirt
  • Still life
  • Characteristics of Life
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #6
  • Bîtan
  • One to Watch, and One to Pray
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #7
  • Brevity
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #8
  • Soldier's girl
  • What I know I cannot say
  • Assignment #3: Write About Your Favorite Book
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #9
  • Against Nostalgia
  • Where bushes periodically burn, children fear other children: girls
  • Frequently Asked Questions: #10
  • How Great the Gardens When They Thrive
  • Commute
  • Oh my dear ones
  • Notes and Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet and editor Dungy (Smith Blue) eschews romanticism for clear-eyed reflection on the nature of survival. In her work, what it means to truly be alive seeps into even the simplest of actions, such as contemplating the peculiarities of Mother Nature or the responsibilities of newfound motherhood. In these poems the past often feels like a ghost that is never too far away, no matter how hard one attempts to bend to the will of the present. In "Conspiracy," Dungy writes, "Last week, a woman smiled at my daughter and I wondered/ if she might have been the sort of girl my mother says spat on my aunt/ when they were children in Virginia all those acts and laws ago." For the poet, motherhood evokes a heightened sense of protective anxiety, coupled with fear of predators and outside threats. It becomes as much about survival as it is about nurturing. On the other hand, Dungy's collection acknowledges that where there is life, death isn't too far behind. In "One to Watch, and One to Pray," a baby is passed back and forth over the deathbed of a loved one, symbolizing the circle of life. Dungy's poems depict a universe of clockwork precision whose logic can be too complex for mortal minds. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.