
Brace's Cove
Joseph Featherstone
(Author)21,000+ Reviews
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Description
The poems of Brace's Cove consider the seemingly random connections between the cosmos and our daily lives. As Featherstone see it, "we are as close to heaven / as it gets," and even "the Milky Way pouring down" is reflected in smaller ways so that we may witness its routine: "Waterlilies, filling with rain, / tipping, filling again." The greater foretells its microcosms, much as waves report momentum for a larger body when they break against a cove then ebb again to open water. The poet recognizes the wearing-down such a process brings, but sees this erosion as necessity rather than diminishment, a recognition that even the sun seems to uphold: "Such radiance - / rinsing the broken world clean." Featherstone's poems work a similar magic, casting their considerable light on the small moment or particular to reveal the vastness that informs it.
Product Details
Publisher | New Issues Poetry and Prose |
Publish Date | October 01, 2000 |
Pages | 73 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780932826947 |
Dimensions | 8.5 X 5.9 X 0.3 inches | 0.4 pounds |
About the Author
JOSEPH FEATHERSTONE was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, and grew up in Japan. He lives in Gloucester, Massachusetts, and East Lansing, Michigan. He has taught at Harvard and Brown Universities, served as Principal of the Commonwealth School in Boston, and was for years editor of the New Republic. His poems and articles have appeared in such publications as The Nation, The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times, Green Mountains Review, Ploughshares, Many Mountains Moving, and The Burning Tree.
Reviews
"A first poetry book by an author who has had numerous other careers (educator, political activist, editor of the New Republic), Brace's Cove is not surprisingly retrospective, but Featherstone's impulse is clearly lyric rather than autobiographic. If the children mentioned in one poem are grown in another, his own chemotherapy described along with his thwarted teenage visit to a tattoo parlor, the landscapes of Japan, Gloucester, and Michigan evoked side by side in a range of decades, Featherstone's book reminds that memory is not chronological--and the ambiguities that arise work to the book's benefit. Is "Middle Child" a poem referring to the generic beliefs regarding birth order, to one of the author's children or to the author himself? "Now I hang like a silk shirt. / If you want my picture / I will draw a face in shadows / At dusk I slip around each tree," he writes, and the poem's clear voice echoes memorably among the book's other narratives.Though he often mentions family deaths and his own treatment for cancer in these poems, Featherstone's tone is never elegiac; rather, he recalls a particular moment that gives some insight into his subject. In "Caitlin," for example, he tells of a seven-year-old who broke her long silence after her brother's death by singing to herself "each of the songs / from the funeral service. / The next morning in school // she announced to her class, / 'I am ready for questions now.' " The image of Japanese paper lanterns inscribed with the names of the dead and set aflame to float in a lake (from "To the Inland Sea") could serve as well to symbolize Featherstone's appreciation of human life as luminous, devastating, too brief. "We barely have time," he writes in the voice of American abstract painter Arthur Dove in "Arthur Dove's Apology," "to praise a bend of light." With simple language that only occasionally crosses the line into prosiness, Featherstone presents startling new views of the familiar, as in the poem "Once." There he describes seeing his newly bald (post-chemotherapy) head in a mirror: "Imagine the shock / when I check my scalp in a new reflection // and see: all my childhood scars / are gone."--Janet Holmes "ForeWord Reviews" (8/16/2000 12:00:00 AM)
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