Set to the music of rain, these shattered elegies seek communion in the ethereal place between birth and death.
A National Poetry Series winner, chosen by Eileen Myles.Set to the music of rain, these shattered elegies seek communion in the ethereal place between birth and death."As a reader I feel included a lot in Julie Carr's hard and beautiful book. I can pretty much hear its author speak-a whispering that enables us into its world . . . a masterfully sutured journey, painfully useful. Sarah-Of Fragments and Lines is a book I know I will return to. And urge it on my friends who have lives too and write in them."-Eileen Myles"Julie Carr's harrowing new book is composed of a complex music of grief and fragmentation that illuminates the fragile distance between mothers and daughters. To read Sarah-Of Fragments and Lines is to recall once again that memory might just be the singular attribute of being human and that there can be no poetics of daily life that does not confront loss. Such is the domain of love; such is the vocation of poetry."-Peter GizziIn the wake of a mother's battle with Alzheimer's and a child's impending birth, Julie Carr gathers the shards of both mourning and joy to give readers poems that encompass it all: "Zebra and xylophone cyclone and sorrow." Here she says, "Since I lost her I stored her like ore in my / form as if later I'd find her, restore her," giving voice to the longing that accompanies life's most profound losses and its most anticipated arrivals.
Julie Carr is the author of Mead: An Epithalamion, selected by Cole Swensen for the University of Georgia Press's Contemporary Poetry Series Prize, Equivocal (Alice James Books), and 100 Notes on Violence, selected by Rae Armantrout for the Sawtooth Award (Ahsahta Press). Her poems have appeared in The Best American Poetry, Boston Review, The Nation, A Public Space, and elsewhere. Raised in Massachusetts, she received her MFA at New York University and her PhD at University of California-Berkeley. She is the co-publisher of Counterpath Press, teaches at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and lives in Denver.
"As Carr shuttles among her triple roles as mother, daughter, writer, individual words and phonemes shuttle back and forth like classical melodies. . . . Repetitions and echoes owe something to Gertrude Stein, but Carr's earnest music never simply repeats earlier experiment. Rather, her spare songlike pages . . . portray the strong contrary pulls in her divided mind."—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"As Carr shuttles among her triple roles as mother, daughter, writer, individual words and phonemes shuttle back and forth like classical melodies. . . . Repetitions and echoes owe something to Gertrude Stein, but Carr's earnest music never simply repeats earlier experiment. Rather, her spare songlike pages . . . portray the strong contrary pulls in her divided mind."—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Exclusive, early access finished books for booksellers, librarians, and mediaPromotion through the author's Facebook page and publishing house web site: dorsers (confirmed): Eileen Myles, National Poetry Series judgeEndorsers (potential): Peter Gizzi, Fanny HoweExcerpts: The Nation, A Public Space, Boston Review, New American Writing, Copper Nickel, Palimpsest, Parthenon West, Puerto del Sol, Women's Studies QuarterlyAdvertising: American Poetry Review, Boston Review, Poetry Project NewsletterCo-op available
As Carr shuttles among her triple roles as mother, daughter, writer, individual words and phonemes shuttle back and forth like classical melodies. . . . Repetitions and echoes owe something to Gertrude Stein, but Carr's earnest music never simply repeats earlier experiment. Rather, her spare songlike pages . . . portray the strong contrary pulls in her divided mind."
Versed Rae Armantrout 9780819568793 $22.95 Wesleyan 2009 Or to Begin Again Ann Lauterbach 9780143115205 $18 Penguin 2009
Julie Carr's previous titles have received extensive review coverage and raves from some of our most accomplished poets, including Rae Armantrout, Cole Swensen, Claudia Rankine, Elizabeth Robinson, and Jean Valentine. This collection will benefit from the increased publicity surrounding National Poetry Series winners.