One Morning-
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Wave Books
Published:17th Sep '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Excerpts have already appeared in BOMB, Poets.org, The Literary Review, Omniverse, and The White Review. Galleys and review copies will be sent to print and online media outlets with dedicated poetry coverage, including The Nation, Bookforum, Publishers Weekly, Harper's, The Believer, BOMB, Boston Review, The Rumpus, and Poetry. An ad will appear in Bookforum. LibraryThing and Goodreads giveaways planned. Co-op available.
A sharp new collection in response to a kaleidoscopic modern culture by a defining poet of her generation."[Wolff's poems] are stylistic and tonal shapeshifters. Hip, contemplative, and dark and resistant to the hunky-dory, the New Agey, and the prescriptive, they're unnerving, funny, and occasionally subversive."-Bookforum Poet, novelist, and Fence Books founder Rebecca Wolff's internal monologue made external in poetry is uncanny. Her musical and darkly funny fourth collection, One Morning-, spans language, culture, art history, love, passion, grief, consumerism, environmental devastation, and the ekphrastic experience of pop and high culture. She experiments with torque, energy, narrative-two steps ahead of herself with the reader on her heels. From "Today Is a Good Day to Fly (Life Begins at)": I'm really digging this blue sky after so much rain with my regular menstrual cycle my Def Jam progesterone cream the blow-in (in my pocket) (ripped out) from in-flight music magazine "touching cloth" like the Romantics do. Insert jitney. Rebecca Wolff is the author of four collections of poetry, one novel, and numerous pieces of occasional prose. Her first book, Manderley, was selected for the National Poetry Series by Robert Pinsky. Her second, Figment, was selected for the Barnard Women Poets Prize by Claudia Rankine and Eavan Boland. Her third, The King, was published by W. W. Norton in 2009. Her novel The Beginners was published by Riverhead in 2011. She is a graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop and has been a fellow at the MacDowell Colony and the Millay Colony for the Arts. In 1998, Wolff founded the influential literary journal Fence; in 2001 she founded Fence Books and launched The Constant Critic website. Wolff lives in Hudson, New York, and is currently a fellow at the New York State Writers Institute at the University at Albany.
In her fourth collection, Wolff hits with constant flashes of humor and revelation in poems as tightly controlled as they are varied. [Its] wide range is one of the collection's finest qualities, with poems conjuring music out of fragmentation, narrative prose, rapid repetition, simple lyric imagery, and unexpected syntax. --Publishers Weekly Hers is a world desiring transfiguration, the renewal of harmonic convergence of self and outside-self. In this, [Wolff] is a romantic revolutionary, an exemplary detour from the dichotomous categorization of poets as being either experimental or lyrical. Yes, Wolff's work affirms, you can have it both ways and in fact be both. --Jon Curley, Hyperallergic
ISBN: 9781940696126
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 382g
176 pages