The Switching/Yard

Fiction & Literature, Poetry, American
Cover of the book The Switching/Yard by Jan Beatty, University of Pittsburgh Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Jan Beatty ISBN: 9780822978701
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press Publication: March 31, 2013
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press Language: English
Author: Jan Beatty
ISBN: 9780822978701
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Publication: March 31, 2013
Imprint: University of Pittsburgh Press
Language: English

In Jan Beatty’s fourth collection, The Switching/Yard, she takes us through the ravaged landscape of the American West. In unflinching lines of burning lyric and relentless narrative, she forges the constructed body into movement. What is still stereotyped as the romantic journey—now becomes as scarred as the Rust Belt. What lives in our collective unconscious as the Golden West becomes almost surreal, as these poems snap that vision in half with extended description of ghost explorers.

We see the open truck cab, the farm workers on the corner waiting for pick-up; we see the speaker returning west to find the long-abandoned story of the birthfather. There is no stable landscape here except the horizontal action of moving through. Landscape becomes story. In this extended tale of the idea of family, we find stand-ins for the father in the form of a hit man, Jim Morrison, and ultimately the unyielding road takes the place of the body. The Switching/Yard is at once the horizontal world of the birth table where babies are switched, the complex yard of the body where gender routinely shifts and switches, and the actual switching yard of the trains that run the inevitable tracks of this book.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In Jan Beatty’s fourth collection, The Switching/Yard, she takes us through the ravaged landscape of the American West. In unflinching lines of burning lyric and relentless narrative, she forges the constructed body into movement. What is still stereotyped as the romantic journey—now becomes as scarred as the Rust Belt. What lives in our collective unconscious as the Golden West becomes almost surreal, as these poems snap that vision in half with extended description of ghost explorers.

We see the open truck cab, the farm workers on the corner waiting for pick-up; we see the speaker returning west to find the long-abandoned story of the birthfather. There is no stable landscape here except the horizontal action of moving through. Landscape becomes story. In this extended tale of the idea of family, we find stand-ins for the father in the form of a hit man, Jim Morrison, and ultimately the unyielding road takes the place of the body. The Switching/Yard is at once the horizontal world of the birth table where babies are switched, the complex yard of the body where gender routinely shifts and switches, and the actual switching yard of the trains that run the inevitable tracks of this book.

More books from University of Pittsburgh Press

Cover of the book How to Play a Poem by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Weather Central by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Elegy On Toy Piano by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Race and Renaissance by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Victorian Literature and the Physics of the Imponderable by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Anti-Literature by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book A Revised Poetry of Western Philosophy by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Hard Times by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Networking Arguments by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Remembering Cold Days by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book The Widening Spell of the Leaves by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Kimonos in the Closet by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Inevitably Toxic by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Interstate by Jan Beatty
Cover of the book Four Decades of Scientific Explanation by Jan Beatty
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy