Loom-2011 Open Book Prize
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Omnidawn Publishing
Published:1st May '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The word loom calls us to the edges, perhaps even limits, of life-to what appears as the space and means of creation-and to what appears on that horizon, soliciting reflection and response. In Sarah Gridley's third collection of poems, the word serves as emblem and omen, as signal object of meditation. At the loom-and looming-is The Lady of Shalott-poetic specter of Tennyson's surfaced-and silenced-anima. Trusting in the deep ambiguities of text and textile, spirit and matter, masculine and feminine, Loom calls the Lady back to life, out of isolation, circumscription, and distraction. A book of poems set against the work of disconnection, Loom searches for reconstructions of gender, dwelling, and the sacred.
"Loom seems at times a Book of Hours both contemporary and medieval, illuminated everywhere with intellect, grace, and a persuasive belief in beauty; at other times, something woven of many histories -- private, natural, literary -- a fabric that at once conceals and discloses." -- Carl Phillips, Judge, 2012 Omnidawn Open Book Contest "Gridley's evocative, romantic, three-part collection weaves its own myths and phrases loosely around Tennyson's poem 'The Lady of Shalott,' ... the Lady is a poet, a muse, a spirit of history, a symbol for mind itself." -- Publishers Weekly (21 January 2013)
ISBN: 9781890650780
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
88 pages