All Saints and Other American Sonnets - by Jack J B Hutchens (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- All Saints and Other American Sonnets is a collection of poems that bridges the landscapes of the American Midwest with the cultural memory and mythos of Eastern Europe.
- Author(s): Jack J B Hutchens
- 32 Pages
- Poetry, American
Description
Book Synopsis
All Saints and Other American Sonnets is a collection of poems that bridges the landscapes of the American Midwest with the cultural memory and mythos of Eastern Europe. From Kansas dirt roads to the streets of Warsaw and the ruins of Mariupol, these sonnets trace the scars of labor, war, migration, and memory across continents and generations.
Written in a clear, lyrical language, the collection revisits the working-class poetics of place while engaging with philosophical and historical undercurrents: existential reflection, folklore, the toll of capitalism, and the persistence of family and faith. These are poems of rusted pickups and cracked sidewalks, of ancestral graves and mythic beasts, where the sacred and the profane coexist in everyday life.
Formally, the poems follow a broad definition of the sonnet: structured with three quatrains and a final couplet, but unconstrained by rhyme and meter. Each poem contains a volta, or rhetorical turn, honoring the tradition of the sonnet while adapting it to contemporary concerns and voices. In embracing this flexible form, the collection claims space in the lineage of the "American" sonnet-one that privileges open language, personal experience, and poetic honesty over formal rigidity.
At once elegiac and grounded, the poems find poetry in the rhythms of manual labor, in generational wisdom passed through calloused hands, and in fleeting moments of communion with land, language, and loss. Drawing inspiration from the likes of Stanislaw Wyspiański and William Stafford, the voice in this collection is both intimate and expansive-rooted in specific geographies while attuned to global crises and the human condition.