The Perils of Geography

Fiction & Literature, Poetry
Cover of the book The Perils of Geography by Helen Humphreys, Brick Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Helen Humphreys ISBN: 9781771312318
Publisher: Brick Books Publication: September 15, 1995
Imprint: Brick Books Language: English
Author: Helen Humphreys
ISBN: 9781771312318
Publisher: Brick Books
Publication: September 15, 1995
Imprint: Brick Books
Language: English

In her third book of poetry The Perils of Geography, Helen Humphreys charts a world that opens under the prodding and promise of language. With the wit and eye for evocative detail which gained readers for both Gods and Other Mortals and Nuns Looking Anxious, Listening to Radios, Humphreys probes the immediacy of now, the intensity of this, the residue of then. Don’t be deceived by the spare appearance; her poems are resonant and full, "all angles and confidence." Light falls slant across them. She maps "what surrounds not what's made still" -- "the moving line." The line she traces connects the pull of memory and moment, open roads and winter aconite, transcendental basements and ornamental shrubbery. In "Singing to the Bees," the ten poem sequence which makes up the second of three sections in Perils, she slips inside folk wisdoms, wears them with an easy grace, all flesh and wit and possibility: dancing shoes, gifted pigs, swarming bees, airplane nuns and spectre ships. These poems make superstition delicious.

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

In her third book of poetry The Perils of Geography, Helen Humphreys charts a world that opens under the prodding and promise of language. With the wit and eye for evocative detail which gained readers for both Gods and Other Mortals and Nuns Looking Anxious, Listening to Radios, Humphreys probes the immediacy of now, the intensity of this, the residue of then. Don’t be deceived by the spare appearance; her poems are resonant and full, "all angles and confidence." Light falls slant across them. She maps "what surrounds not what's made still" -- "the moving line." The line she traces connects the pull of memory and moment, open roads and winter aconite, transcendental basements and ornamental shrubbery. In "Singing to the Bees," the ten poem sequence which makes up the second of three sections in Perils, she slips inside folk wisdoms, wears them with an easy grace, all flesh and wit and possibility: dancing shoes, gifted pigs, swarming bees, airplane nuns and spectre ships. These poems make superstition delicious.

More books from Brick Books

Cover of the book Auguries by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book When This World Comes to an End by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Eyes Like Pigeons by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Lilli Chernofsky by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book The Grey Islands by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book To Kill a White Dog by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Tavara Tinker: Sounds of Time by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book The Artemesia Book by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book I, Nadja, and Other Poems by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book The Authority of Roses by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Maverick by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Noble Gas, Penny Black by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Reunion by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Laika by Helen Humphreys
Cover of the book Alien, Correspondent by Helen Humphreys
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