About this item
Highlights
- The Book of Spells is a collection of poems that believes the world around us is shaped and reshaped by language and that changing our language is a revolutionary act of political and social magic that can replace long-standing destructive agreements with the benignity of loving clarity.This collection of spells begins by following the tracks of a mythical creature composed of language and blood across an unblemished field of silence.
- About the Author: Gary Lemons has written poetry since 1965.
- 152 Pages
- Poetry, American
Description
About the Book
"Poems that are all different "spells.""--Book Synopsis
The Book of Spells is a collection of poems that believes the world around us is shaped and reshaped by language and that changing our language is a revolutionary act of political and social magic that can replace long-standing destructive agreements with the benignity of loving clarity.
This collection of spells begins by following the tracks of a mythical creature composed of language and blood across an unblemished field of silence. We can never catch this creature, who perhaps is made real by our pursuit of it. There are glimpses-shadows--made into poems in a poor attempt to construct the whole from the parts. This book is a brush dipped in flowers--corpses--schoolyards--the smell of ocean and tears attempting to paint over without erasing the world we've constructed as it is.
Review Quotes
"In his new book of poetry, Gary Lemons continues his relentless exploration into the personal/global linguistic-fossils are exhumed and given flesh before our eyes--animals whisper outside the small fire where we deliberate their fate--everyday magic, spun from words dug from the earth, comforts ecstatic figures as we watch through the portal of the poems--not even Mallarméeacute; took such liberties with such results--these poems are edgy shards of light cutting new paths through an increasing darkness."
--Norman Dubie, author of The Quotations of Bone
"A sublimely subversive intentionality drives this book's magical agency, its tremulous unveilings, and its psychic dissections. Gary Lemons' poetry is a corporeal cri de coeur of warmed-over tears spilling a weary lament onto each page. Offering a wild praxis of hitchhiking into tangled ancestries, misty memories, and undulations in the cosmic dark, the poems in this spellbinding collection inhabit a gaping cultural wound in the soft flesh of today's language. Their subliminal salve is a brew of unsaid prayers, transparent whispers of waiting echoes, smiles curling on a dream's edge, and the dawn of a morning that can't help but happen."
--Shabnam Mirchandani, author of Icelight
"In his new book of poetry, Gary Lemons continues his relentless exploration into the personal/global linguistic--fossils are exhumed and given flesh before our eyes--animals whisper outside the small fire where we deliberate their fate--everyday magic, spun from words dug from the earth, comforts ecstatic figures as we watch through the portal of the poems--not even Mallarmé took such liberties with such results--these poems are edgy shards of light cutting new paths through an increasing darkness."
--Norman Dubie, author of The Quotations of Bone
"A sublimely subversive intentionality drives this book's magical agency, its tremulous unveilings, and its psychic dissections. Gary Lemons' poetry is a corporeal cri de coeur of warmed-over tears spilling a weary lament onto each page. Offering a wild praxis of hitchhiking into tangled ancestries, misty memories, and undulations in the cosmic dark, the poems in this spellbinding collection inhabit a gaping cultural wound in the soft flesh of today's language. Their subliminal salve is a brew of unsaid prayers, transparent whispers of waiting echoes, smiles curling on a dream's edge, and the dawn of a morning that can't help but happen."
--Shabnam Mirchandani, author of Icelight
About the Author
Gary Lemons has written poetry since 1965. He attended Bread Loaf Writers' Conference in 1971 and 1972 and graduated from the Undergraduate Poetry Workshop at the University of Iowa in 1975. He has studied with some of the great poets of his and any generation, including Norman Dubie, Maxine Kumin, William Stafford, John Berryman, Diane Wakoski, and Donald Justice, none of whom are to blame for what he made of their guidance. He has published eight books of poetry, including The Snake Quartet. Of the many things he's done to support his writing, he's most grateful for the time spent reforesting clear-cuts in the PNW where he planted over 500,000 trees. He lives in Port Townsend, Washington, between the sea and the mountains, with his life partner Nöle Giulini, to whom this and all his books are dedicated.