dandelion bookcover

dandelion

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Description

In beautifully lyrical language, Heather Swan evokes both the broken human world of self-inflicted damage (pesticides, herbicides, "the noise of industry and ego") and the healing natural world of replenishment and repair (rock, bird, water, animal, plant, air). If, for Swan, the human body is "a desert drilled for petroleum," "a trout stream dying," "a splinter pulled from a tree," it is also "an astral body," "a celestial body," "a body of light." Whether lamenting the death of a beloved father or the loss of an endangered species; meditating speculatively on the post-apocalyptic thoughts of Noah's wife; riffing on the likes of Kermit the Frog, Wile E. Coyote, or Piglet and Winnie the Pooh; or simply delighting in the freshness and vividness of experience, Swan illuminates the depths of our daily lives. For a reader, gifted with such honest, clear-eyed, evocative and restorative poems as these, there is "Nothing left to say but, / thank you./ Thank you."

-Ron Wallace, For a Limited Time Only

Product Details

PublisherTerrapin Books
Publish DateOctober 09, 2023
Pages106
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781947896697
Dimensions9.0 X 6.0 X 0.3 inches | 0.4 pounds
BISAC Categories: Poetry, Nature, Poetry

About the Author

Heather Swan is the author of the poetry collection A Kinship with Ash (Terrapin Books), which was a finalist for the ASLE Book Award, and the chapbook The Edge of Damage (Parallel Press), which won the Wisconsin Chapbook Award. She is also the author of the non-fiction book Where Honeybees Thrive: Stories from the Field (Penn State Press), which won the Sigurd F. Olson Nature Writing Award, and a companion book, Where the Grass Still Sings: Stories of Insects and Interconnection. She is the recipient of an Illinois Arts Council Fellowship, the Maud Weinshenk Award, and the August Derleth Prize for Poetry. She teaches environmental literature and writing at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Reviews

Heather Swan's poems are passionately observed "field notes" from the natural world. There's a reverence here for what's imperiled, a poetry grounded in knowledge, at the same time keenly aware of the limits of knowledge. Alert to accelerating environmental harm, these poems utilize science, myth, children's stories, as well as reports from the crow, muskrat, and cedar waxwing to urge us back from the brink. In dandelion, Swan blurs the distinction between who we are and where we live until borders become bridges, even reverent sites of transformation-"please hold us, enfold us, transform / us the way the lichens / transform stone." These poems are beautiful with useful, as opposed to ornamental, beauty. Beauty is their backbone. When read in the spirit in which they seem to have been written, these field notes, though replete with warning, are also consistently braided with celebration and gratitude, perhaps in service of leading us toward the realization that we have "No choice/but to rise . . ."

-Max Garland, Into the Good World Again: Poems


Dandelion is a book written for this era of eco-catastrophes. Heather Swan writes from the heart about both global and personal losses in a collection where her father's Parkinson's coexists with the slaughter of elephants, where a muskrat swims through a world that also includes the observations of Noah's wife about the Flood. Celebratory and elegiac, in dandelion, Swan reminds us exactly of the world she-we all-must fight fiercely to defend.

-Jesse Lee Kercheval, I Want To Tell You

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