Blowout

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Product Details
Price
$18.00  $16.74
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
104
Dimensions
6.0 X 8.4 X 0.3 inches | 0.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780822962366
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Denise Duhamel is a distinguished university professor in the MFA program at Florida International University in Miami. Her previous books include Second Story, Scald, Blowout, Ka-Ching!, Two and Two, and Queen for a Day: Selected and New Poems. She is a recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Reviews
"Brims with Duhamel's characteristic fixations--language (the British slang of 'My New Chum'), poor or at least pathetic everyday behavior (losing hundreds between the ATM and her car), pop culture (movies, TV, eBay, pole dancing), unpleasant erotic memories ('Kindergarten Boyfriend, ' 'Or Whatever Your Final Destination May Be, ' 'Victor')--and still presents the miracle of how serious a life embedded in humdrum and commercialized reality can be. In fact, one poem in particular, 'Worst Case Scenario'--a solid block of successive personal disasters--negatively apotheosizes just such embeddedness. It takes your breath away."
--Booklist

"Open this book, and you plunge into a maelstrom; Duhamel unspools line after long line about a bitter divorce and its aftermath. . . . While Duhamel leads us through the grubbiness of the breakup, the tone is more black comedy than self-pity. . . . A finely drawn if somewhat obsessive portrait for readers who like their poetry on the narrative side."

--Library Journal


"Denise Duhamel's Blowout chronicles the journey from heartbreak to new love but is so much more. It is a meditation on love and the sacrifices we make to create it in tenements, in condos, on boardwalks, and in our own hearts. Wearing her rare shade of Bali Brown lipstick, Duhamel strides through lovelorn streets like a Valkyrie, a straight-talking goddess, who takes on the teeming world and makes it her own."
--Barbara Hamby
"The discerning exuberance that has long defined Denise Duhamel's work is distressed in Blowout, but it is ultimately resilient. These poems traverse the distance between loss (the first poem is 'How Will It End') and praise (the last poem is 'Ode to Eyebrows') with the urgency of someone 'trying to remember the exact wording of [her] fortune.' Duhamel's poems continue shouldering difficult, disorderly subjects with remarkable imagination and candor. She remains one of the best poets writing today. Blowout is a devastating book."
--Terrance Hayes

"Duhamel is one of my favorite poets and one of the most captivating, comforting, challenging writers I have ever read. . . . 'Blowout' is as momentous, as staggering, as devastating and triumphant as the word implies."

--The Iowa Review (Julie Marie Wade)


"[A] knockout . . . Duhamel puts language on a taut highwire, gives it a spotlight, and makes it dazzle. . . . Throughout 'Blowout, ' Duhamel simultaneously marries heartbreak to humor. The book is that rare and fabulous blend of conversational talk and burnished lyricism. There is a wisdom in 'Blowout' born from its talky gorgeousness. . . . Beauty is always risky, and with Duhamel at the wheel, it's also always where we will be delivered. I'll follow Duhamel anywhere she leads."

--Florida Book Review


"Duhamel's poetry is admirable for so many reasons; she's playful and wise and funny and heartbreaking all at once. What more do you want from poetry?"

--Chamber Four


"Blowout is a terrific book of poems that delivers the pleasures of a good novel. Its protagonist is brave and resilient. She's observant and curious about the world no matter what happens to her. She's unsparing and hilarious. Whether wrenched by uncoupling, or catapulted back to childhood, or plummeting from fiscal cliffs, or shooting the rapids of postmodern romance, she is our hero. She never retreats, never turns bitter, gives everyone and everything (no matter how painful) its due, never losing eloquence or nerve. If I had a daughter old enough to read what a woman's life really is, the glory and the comedy and the hell of it, I'd give her this book."
--Amy Gerstler