Fr. 22.50

We the Jury - Poems

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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¿A book of dark and sometimes surreal love poems from the heart of a man to his wife, his children, his nation, and his past.¿ ¿JERICHO BROWN

List of contents










Contents

The News

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On Progress

The American Middle Class

After the Miscarriage

Ohio, My Friends Are Dying

Little Domestic Elegies

Love Poem

Generational

Carillon

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Two Thousand and Nine

Stages on a Journey Westward

Meeting the Board

The Lens

Middle Age

The Future

Song from the Back of the House

The Rapture: A Sermon

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Parable of Childhood

Notes: History

Rain Study

Middle Age

Two Sisters

Mind-Body Problem

The Invention of the Afterlife

From the Afterlife of the Rich

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On History

We the Jury

Armistice

The Reenactment

An American Abroad

The Narcissist

At Today's Auschwitz

The Humanist

About the author

Wayne Miller is the author of Post-, winner of the Rilke Prize and the Colorado Book Award; The City, Our City, shortlisted for the Rilke Prize and the William Carlos Williams Award; The Book of Props, named a best poetry book of the year by Coldfront Magazine and the Kansas City Star; and Only the Senses Sleep, winner of the William Rockhill Nelson Award. He has received the George Bogin Memorial Award, the Lucille Medwick Memorial Award, the Lyric Poetry Award, a Ruth Lilly Fellowship, the Bess Hokin Prize, and a Fulbright Distinguished Scholarship to the Seamus Heaney Centre at Queen’s University Belfast. He is cotranslator of two books by the Albanian writer Moikom Zeqo—most recently Zodiac, which was shortlisted for the PEN Center USA Award in Translation—and coeditor of three books: Literary Publishing in the Twenty-First Century, Tamura Ryuichi: On the Life & Work of a 20th Century Master, and New European Poets. He teaches at the University of Colorado Denver, co-directs the Unsung Masters Series, and serves as editor/managing editor of Copper Nickel.

Summary

“A book of dark and sometimes surreal love poems from the heart of a man to his wife, his children, his nation, and his past.” —JERICHO BROWN

Additional text

"One of the most outstanding American poets of his generation . . . Miller's poems face the unvarnished truth of racism and inequality with unsentimental and intriguing utterance." —Sunday Independent

"A sharply conceived and exquisitely written collection . . . It's especially striking to read these poems now, because they feel perfectly suited for our fractured times, but a collection this assured, this perfectly rendered, will remain fresh and equally resonant for future readers." —Los Angeles Review

"We the Jury is a good-hearted testament to not only the intricate treading of history but also to enduring love, and the radical strength required to thrive in a ravaged world . . . What Miller does with the expression and capacity of love is magnificent and indeed, memorable. The poems enlarge its concept, open it up in a way that is not a vague, distant thought to the reader, but rather, a real outward force, a gentle beckoning to every wild and quiet possibility." —Southern Indiana Review

"Miller—skeptical, exact, yet not entirely without hope—is one of the best. 'On History,' about the poet's relationship with a convicted murderer, is surely one of the most nuanced explorations of justice (criminal or otherwise) that you are likely to read this year." —California Review of Books

"These entries candidly showcase the complexity of human contradictions, and the many forms of grief, doubt, and joy on offer. Moving between specific moments in history and ripe lyrical musings, these poems embrace the unanswerable, offering a deep and satisfying look at selfhood." —Publishers Weekly

"Poetry can transform the imagination, and the kind of changes Miller offers are ones we might shy away from. But the book itself is brave, and it makes me feel brave enough to face even the griefs and losses I have yet to encounter." —Meridian

"The poems are dramatic but understated, quiet in the way a bassoon can fill a room without alarming the audience; they are gifts of steady language—unpretentious, unambiguous—in a world swarming with hornet-tipped voices . . . The poems are quiet like an iris bulb. If a reader puts her ear close, she'll hear the ground rumbling." —Colorado Review

"An introspective call-to-action like no other . . . We the Jury delivers the informal findings of our conflicted and always-evolving existence and exposes the heart." —RHINO

"At times heartbreaking, but always beautiful, We the Jury is a collection that does not shy away from the realities of life—those of aging, politics, of violence, or of loss." —The West Review

"In We the Jury, Wayne Miller asks probing questions about joy, grief, mortality, and understanding others." —Library Journal

"In his latest collection, We the Jury, Millwer looks out at his world as a husband, a father, a citizen, and asks with honesty and rapture: 'What is this America, what is this life?' A keen observer, Miller is not disheartened by past atrocities and current struggles, but is compelled to hold them in front of him and be candid about what he sees . . . Throughout the book, Miller tackles plenty of tough topics—miscarriage, heroin addiction, housing crisis, middle age, war—but all with a measure of gentleness and abundance. As he observes wisely, 'Bomb craters' with time become 'ponds / exploding with lilies.'" —Ben Groner, Parnassus

"Simultaneously devastating and stunningly beautiful . . . [Miller's] is an unflinching, steady gaze, and he clearly feels and sees deeply, attending to the world around him through a lyric that manages to unpack complex ideas across a handful of carved, crafted lines." —Rob Mclennan

“We the Jury is a book of dark and sometimes surreal love poems from the heart of a man to his wife, his children, his nation, and his past. ‘Marveling at the age of things,’ Miller writes with an understanding of community and the knowledge that any one understanding must be questioned: ‘we will come down upon us with the weight of our entire existence // even then not one of us // will truly understand what we have done.’ It’s the subtleties and vulnerabilities of these poems that move them from a good look at recent history to a leap of lyric exploration.”—Jericho Brown



“We the Jury is incisive and deeply personal, plumbing complex human questions (how do we belong, who decides what we belong to, how do we contend with the evidence of our mortality) in ways that feel both current and enduring. These poems are succinct, the line breaks taut and attentive, and the narratives profoundly compelling. Rich in image and full of the unexpected, We the Jury offers glimpses of a nation, a family, a life, and a mind at work piecing together (and picking apart) the stories that shape our individual and collective experience. A truly moving and meaningful book.”—Rebecca Lindenberg

“There is no didacticism in We the Jury because the paradoxes, quandaries, and trespasses of our age are not presented for predetermined consumption. Through Miller’s wisdom and fearlessness, these spare, incisive lyrics drop us into a stark world. They bare what we fail to remember or what we fail to understand about our pseudo-productive, throwaway existence. Whether Miller implicates his speaker in our false economy or resists an indictment, he pays chilling attention to the present. That is, his curiosity is both passionate and disinterested. Moments of suspended wonder abound. In We the Jury, every poem, measured and flawless, says, look with open eyes.”—Martha Serpas

“We the Jury is a startling, radiant book. Wayne Miller dangles the hope to be ‘lifted // into the purity of our politics’—then yanks it back with truth. The truth? Cell phones buzzing in the pockets of massacred gay men is ‘the best image we had / of what made us a nation.’ I admire so much, including Miller’s elemental gift for metaphor: the ‘lit-up silence’ after a miscarriage; the vacant houses of the rich ‘mute and clear, like still water.’ No American poet interrogates the ways our center cannot hold—middle class, middle age, Midwest, rage—better, and more humanely, than Wayne Miller.”—Randall Mann

Praise for Wayne Miller

“Miller is among the best poets in the USA at the moment.”Notre Dame Review

“Miller makes a vast impact using the smallest stroke.”New Yorker

“A singular figure in American poetry.”Colorado Review

“In Miller’s lines, we hear the ancient magic of sorrow transformed to hope, elegy bent back around to ode.”—D. A. Powell

“Miller’s poems are subdued, restrained. For the engaged reader they move ever so slightly, like plates at a fault line, but that slight movement leads to thundering effects—awesome and demolishing.”American Microreviews & Interviews

“Shrewdly pithy and nuanced, edgy and commiserating, Miller’s poems are beacons.”Booklist

Product details

Authors Wayne Miller, Miller Wayne
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 09.03.2021
 
EAN 9781571315311
ISBN 978-1-57131-531-1
No. of pages 104
Illustrations Illustrationen, nicht spezifiziert
Subjects Fiction > Poetry, drama
Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative literary studies

Ohio, POETRY / American / General, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Death, Grief, Loss, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Family, Narrative theme: Death, grief, loss, Modern & contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)

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