Far-Fetched
Poems
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
A new collection from one of contemporary American poetry's finest craftsmen
Through birdcalls and ancient songs, rain patter and a child's scribble, the poems in Far-Fetched "sound the empty space / to test how long / how far." They follow the contours of Appalachian hillsides, Missouri river bends, and remote Australian coastlines, tuning language to landscape. They register emotional life with great care; this is a work of fierce and delicate attention to the world. It is also poetry meant to be heard, alert to the pleasures of sound. As August Kleinzahler has observed, "In Devin Johnston's poetry every syllable is alive; the vowels and consonants combine to make a distinctive, lovely, austere music."
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Johnston (Traveler) offers a fifth collection of poems that sparkle with a sharp eye for image and ear for language play. The way Johnston describes a pair of Orpington chickens "with iridescent necks" would serve equally well for the poems themselves: they "kindle in each yolk, the smallest flame of spring." The first half of the collection examines the textures and strange mysteries of the natural world, occasionally in language that seems to come from another time. "Be stil, and smoothly draw your flye/ to and fro in a kind of daunce/ as if it were alive," Johnston instructs a would-be fly fisher. Then Johnston shifts his subject matter to contemporary urban landscapes without altering the crisp precision with which he sees his surroundings. A "hand waits its turn/ outside a bag of popcorn," and a surprising conversation takes place on a flight from Houston. This is where Johnston lets his character slip through, exploring his role as a poet, birdwatcher, and father. "Let the child cry awhile," he writes, waiting for his child to sleep. In Johnston's arresting poems, "eyes roll inward/ and night unravels/ the wale/ that day has knit."