Random House: Bringing You the Best in Fiction, Nonfiction, and Children's Books
Authors
Books
Features
Newletters and Alerts

California Sorrow

Written by Mary KinzieAuthor Alerts:  Random House will alert you to new works by Mary Kinzie

California Sorrow Enlarge View
Upgrade to the Flash 9 viewer for enhanced content, including the ability to browse and search through your favorite titles
  • Category: Poetry - Single Author
  • Format: Hardcover, 104 pages
  • On Sale: September 25, 2007
  • Price: $25.00
  • ISBN: 978-0-307-26680-4 (0-307-26680-X)
California Sorrow
Written by Mary Kinzie
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780307266804
Our Price: $25.00
 Quantity: 1 
Buy From a Local Store

What's this? Tags for this book (Powered by LibraryThing)

ABOUT THIS BOOK

In this exceptional new collection, acclaimed poet Mary Kinzie opens her attention to the landscapes of the earth. Her poems of richly varied line lengths develop phrases at the syncopated pace of the observing mind: “Slag and synthesis and traveling fire / so many ways the groundwaves of distortion / pulse / through bedrock traffic and the carbon chain” she writes in the opening poem, “The Water-brooks.” Here, and throughout, her reflection on the natural world embraces the damages of time to which we can bear only partial witness but to which the human memory is bound.

In the collection’s title poem, Kinzie goes on to explore her own romantic griefs alongside the adventures of T. S. Eliot, “inadvertently working on a suntan” as he tours the desert in the roadster of his American girlfriend, whose heart he will break. Kinzie’s conviction that sorrow, too, is a form of passion allows her to lift poems from shattered thoughts and long-ago losses, at times blending prose and verse in a combustible mixture.

Determined not to prettify but still expressing fresh wonder at the beauty we stumble across in spite of our shortcomings, Kinzie delivers her bravest work yet in these new poems.

O God invisible as air

My tears have been my meat

sweet
because no noxious thing runs with themonly
fragrant naïveté of the reflective midday when
bank herb and wood flower and water from the pool
can best be gathered
also the knowledge
that these gifts are tenuous and that the mouth
and the harp
might soon be strange to play

  • bookmark, share & shelve:
  • Discuss This Book!
  • Add to Good Reads
  • Add to Librarything
  • Add to Living Social
  • Add to Shelfari
  • Add to WeRead
  • (shelve?)
  • (glue?)
PRINT THIS PAGE EMAIL THIS PAGE