The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Loading Inventory...

Coles

That Winter The Wolf Came by Juliana Spahr, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

From Juliana Spahr

Current price: $24.50
That Winter The Wolf Came by Juliana Spahr, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
That Winter The Wolf Came by Juliana Spahr, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

Coles

That Winter The Wolf Came by Juliana Spahr, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

From Juliana Spahr

Current price: $24.50
Loading Inventory...

Size: 0.31 x 9 x 160

Buy OnlineGet it at Coles
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
That Winter the Wolf Came is written for this era of global struggle. It finds its ferment at the intersection of ecological and economic catastrophe. Its feminist and celebratory energy is fueled by street protests and their shattered windows. Amid oil spills and austerity measures and shore birds and a child holding its mother's hand and hissing teargas canisters, it reminds us exactly what we must fight to defend with a wild ferocity, and what we're up against. In her poems, love does not resist the world beyond; love lets it in. Politics demands feeling rather than denuding it." -Los Angeles Review of Books"Geography, economics, ecology, hydrology, local and international history; repetition, flat limited diction, lengthy chant; intersections of incompatible discourses, such as a field biologist's checklist plus memoir, medical record plus ode, incantation plus site report: Spahr draws on these resources and procedures to make poems that feel like bizarre, careful essays, and essays that feel like sad, extended poems." -The Nation"... a work of crisp wit, bizarre conjunctions and ultimately enduring moral authority." -Publisher's WeeklyExcerpt: It was Non-Revolution. Or it was me. Or it was Non-Revolution and me. I was unsure what it really was. Maybe it was my thoughts. My thoughts at one minute about Non-Revolution. About the smell of Non-Revolution. Sweat, urine, sage, pot, rotting food, hay, all mixed together. Perhaps about Non-Revolution's body. I am sure I am not the only one who has thought it exceptional, but I am also just as sure that by the standards of bodies, Non-Revolution's is fine but not exceptional. That is the point. That is why Non-Revolution is called Non-Revolution, why they have revolution as a possibility in their name but it is a modified and thus negated possibility so as to suggest they are possibly neither good nor f***ed. Still something about Non-Revolution's smell and body had gotten into me. That Winter the Wolf Came is written for this era of global struggle. It finds its ferment at the intersection of ecological and economic catastrophe. Its feminist and celebratory energy is fueled by street protests and their shattered windows. Amid oil spills and austerity measures and shore birds and a child holding its mother's hand and hissing teargas canisters, it reminds us exactly what we must fight to defend with a wild ferocity, and what we're up against."In her poems, love does not resist the world beyond; love lets it in. Politics demands feeling rather than denuding it." -Los Angeles Review of Books"Geography, economics, ecology, hydrology, local and international history; repetition, flat limited diction, lengthy chant; intersections of incompatible discourses, such as a field biologist's checklist plus memoir, medical record plus ode, incantation plus site report: Spahr draws on these resources and procedures to make poems that feel like bizarre, careful essays, and essays that feel like sad, extended poems." -The Nation"... a work of crisp wit, bizarre conjunctions and ultimately enduring moral authority." -Publisher's WeeklyExcerpt: It was Non-Revolution. Or it was me. Or it was Non-Revolution and me. I was unsure what it really was. Maybe it was my thoughts. My thoughts at one minute about Non-Revolution. About the smell of Non-Revolution. Sweat, urine, sage, pot, rotting food, hay, all mixed together. Perhaps about Non-Revolution's body. I am sure I am not the only one who has thought it exceptional, but I am also just as sure that by the standards of bodies, Non-Revolution's is fine but not exceptional. That is the point. That is why Non-Revolution is called Non-Revolution, why they have revolution as a possibility in their name but it is a modified and thus negated possibility so as to suggest they are possibly neither good nor f***ed. Still something about Non-Revolution's smell and body had gotten into me. " | That Winter The Wolf Came by Juliana Spahr, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
Powered by Adeptmind