|
126 pp, 2001
$16.00 paper 0-87745-775-1
Philosophy, suffering, and beauty come romping through this book, with the hard edge of observation. Poems assembled with care and historicism allow us to see through the beauty to the hardship of medieval life. Cole Swensen achieves a rare poetic task assembling from the medieval past the stones of its identity.Barbara Guest
Kuhl House Poets, Jorie Graham and Mark Levine, series editors
Covering a variety of subjectsfrom the plague and the first danse macabre to the development of perspective and recipes for pigmentsthe poems in Cole Swensen's new collection are set in fifteenth-century France and explore the end of the medieval world and its gradual transition into the Renaissance. The collection is loosely based on the calendar illuminations from the Très Riches Heures, the well-known book of hours, and uses them to explore the ways that the artsvisual and verbalinteract with history, at times prefiguring it, at times shaping it, and at times offering wry commentary or commiseration.
Cole Swensen directs the Creative Writing Program at the University of Denver; she is also a translator of contemporary French poetry, fiction, and art criticism. Such Rich Hour is her seventh book. Try, the 1998 Iowa Poetry Prize winner, won the 2000 Poetry Center Book Award from the Poetry Center/American Poetry Archives.
April 3
Curve
now my
love these trees, three
careful arcs
arching away
from
create the space of
the way that turning your back on
The small
|