Inicio > Literatura y estudios literarios > Poesía > Garment for a Long Journey
Garment for a Long Journey

Garment for a Long Journey

Garment for a Long Journey

LoVerne Brown

22,19 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
BookLocker.com Inc
Año de edición:
2020
Materia
Poesía
ISBN:
9781647180249
22,19 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

Garment for a Long Journey celebrates the body of work of California poet LoVerne Brown (1912-2000), whose writing career spanned the late 1920s to the late 1990s. Poems from three earlier collections of her poetry are included in this volume, along with additional loose poems, some never before published.Among the themes of the over 200 poems in Garment for a Long Journey are nature, human relationships, politics, social justice issues (especially the homeless, the poor, and the powerless), diversity, humor, and poetry itself. Brown’s poems possess an energy; they are powerful and engaging and each carries a clear message. If you like the soulfulness of Mary Oliver and Edna St. Vincent Millay and the wit of Dorothy Parker, you’ll enjoy reading LoVerne Brown. One critic has described her work as “a reflection of life’s meaning and our place in it.”She was intuitive and observant and understood the complexities of relationships and the things all humans need to grow and thrive. The need for love? Brown described it simply in her four-line poem Sustenance:Over and around us moveThose nutrients we group as loveAnd each of us with separate sieveMust scoop these plankton in to live.Brown first won acclaim for her poetry while a teenager at the University of California, Berkeley. As a student there in the 1930s, she began a lifelong association with a writing group known as the Bay Area Poets. She won so many awards in the group’s annual writing competition that the rules had to be changed to limit the number of entries per person. In 1932, the anthology California Poets included five poems written by Brown, who at 19 was the youngest poet to be represented in this collection. By 1935, she was working as a newspaper reporter in Juneau, Alaska, where she had lived as a child and where she met and married a fellow reporter George Brown. After the couple relocated to California in 1937, she ghost wrote two books—No Life for a Lady, and Consultation Room—both of which won national awards, and during the 1940s, she sold poems about her children to popular magazines, such as the Saturday Evening Post.Brown was widowed in 1952, two years after moving to San Diego, and being a single parent of three and working a full-time job limited her writing time. But following her retirement in 1974, she was back in action teaching a poetry workshop, which evolved into the Ocean Beach Poetry Circle. It was this group, and Steve Kowit, who published her first book of poetry, The View from the End of the Pier, as a 71st birthday gift.During the last two decades of her life, Brown participated in dozens of local poetry readings, and in 1998, was selected as one of several local poets to read their work on television in conjunction with a 13-part PBS series called Voices and Visions. Her final recognition for her writing came in 1999, when, at the age of 87, Brown received the San Diego Public Library’s Lifetime Achievement Award, an honor given for an author’s body of work.By the time of her death in San Diego in 2000, Brown was a local treasure. Friends had published three collections of her poems, articles had been written about her, she’d done numerous poetry readings, and she’d won many awards. Yet, outside of Southern California, she was not widely known. There was a reason for that…As her friend and fellow poet Steve Kowit once noted: “LoVerne was a superb craftsperson, a poet of genuine power who should have had national recognition. But she was humble and self-effacing and never promoted herself or her work….”Hopefully, this collection will change all that. We invite you to take a journey through the pages of this book and get to know LoVerne Brown. She’s too good to be forgotten.

Artículos relacionados

  • Beyond the Road
    JT Curran
    “Beyond the Road” is JT Curran’s first published volume of poetry.  Selected from collected works which span over fifty years, JT’s poetry blends colorful observations with thought-provoking reflections.  With wit, compassion, irony, and humor, this book invites the reader to consider the signposts, off-ramps, co-travelers and vistas which populate our journeys. JT’s words remi...
    Disponible

    24,76 €

  • Polishing the Silver
    Jennifer Chrystie
    ‘There’s a touch of both Dickinson and Larkin in Jennifer Chrystie’s mature exhumation of the tales and tropes of family. Figures who could so easily flit like phantoms in her well honed poetry are palpably enjoying an after-life in the poet’s ability to redeem through deep understanding. The collection arcs from, at one extreme, the parsimonies of the household, to the transce...
    Disponible

    15,83 €

  • One Kiss
    Edward V Bonner
    The very title of Edward V. Bonner's first volume of poetry, One Kiss (Ingram, 2015), suggests some ways in which the poems inside balance the universal with the particular. Most of the poems examine the themes of beauty and risk, pleasure and danger, in the context of one of three kinds of relationships: to romantic partners, to the spiritual world, and to the world of nature....
    Disponible

    11,43 €

  • Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica
    Valerius Flaccus / Michael Barich
    Swollen seas, erotic monsters, Greek passion gone Latin, deftlyThis 1st-century AD Latin version of the earlier Greek epic features exotic lands, wondrous monsters and a sea voyage over swells of young love. Valerius Flaccus lent sharp Roman refinements and erotic passion to the tale, which are skillfully sustained in this careful and appealing modern translation in English ver...
    Disponible

    19,29 €

  • Crow Impressions & Other Poems
    Edith Hoisington Miller
    Foreword Welcome to the poetry of Edith Hoisington Miller. Through her book, Crow Impressions & Other Poems, we travel through Edith Miller’s life, a journey lived to the fullest through family stories, travel adventures, nature, music, and history. In her poetry, we discover a writer who has spent her life as a quiet observer, but, at the same time, deeply engaged in natural ...
    Disponible

    15,40 €

  • The Truth about A
    Maureen O'Shaughnessy
    In his interpretation of Antigone, Seamus Heaney says, ‘Nobody can be sure they are always right.’ Maureen O’Shaughnessy’s The Truth about A further attends to this idea through various readings of the myth as portrayed by Sophocles, Brecht, Ted Hughes, Anne Carson and, most particularly, Euripides. Set in contemporary Sydney, among a fictional underworld family, The Truth abou...
    Disponible

    13,35 €