Four-Legged Girl: Poems

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Product Details
Price
$17.00  $15.81
Publisher
Graywolf Press
Publish Date
Pages
88
Dimensions
7.0 X 0.2 X 9.0 inches | 0.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781555977221
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About the Author
Diane Seuss is the author of two previous poetry collections, It Blows You Hollow and Wolf Lake, White Gown Blown Open, winner of the Juniper Prize for Poetry. Her poems have appeared in Best American Poetry 2014, The Georgia Review, New Orleans Review, Poetry, and elsewhere. She is a writer in residence at Kalamazoo College and lives in Michigan.
Reviews
Praise for Diane Seuss
"These poems arrive breakneck and unfurling. They speak large and small and in between. They're full of wantings and havings and convey a sense of every moment as a wellspring for greater attachment to the world." --Bob Hicok
"Diane Seuss is one of the country's most imaginative and significant poets." --Quraysh Ali Lansana
"For all its considerable invention, wit, tonal complexity, and vivid imagery--not to mention its economy and concentration--Diane Seuss's work is never content to settle for craft. There is an insistently human connection to experience in each of her poems." --Stuart Dybek
Praise for Diane Seuss
"In her electric new book, Diane Seuss speaks as a backwards Oracle, bringing the laser eye of aftermath to the 'archived selves': the one who 'looked up into the dark for something to bloom by, ' the one tenderized and traumatized by New York City in its days of junkie glory: boyfriend stealing her blind for a fix, encounters with William Burroughs and Andy Warhol, 'a column of chalk at dead center of the gallery.' These poems feel driven by a fury for correction: romantic ideal is delusion, the charisma of the poete maudit a huckster's sham. Seuss blazes up into the dark and dirty corners of youthful folly, in poems that are visually sharp and linguistically alive; her voice is lucid, earthy, mordant, and funny. No pity, no quarter, for the old self: 'Some of us claw our way to the bottom, ' Seuss writes, 'transcend downward. There at the hub / of the drain we swirl.'" --Dana Levin "'Having noticed it, why not say it?' These words, like so many throughout this unforgettable collection, may someday be an epigraph in the book of a Diane Seuss disciple. They connote the kinetic candor of her work; the boldness of her insight, ecstasy, and melancholy. A great passion issues from the pages of "Four-Legged Girl." Titles often bleed into the poems as if emulating Seuss's junctions of head and body, thinking and feeling. This book is a wise, wild, continuous gift. It will make you lean in and listen; it will make you this poet's devotee. These poems are tremendous in every way. Diane Seuss: holy smoke!" --Terrance Hayes "These poems arrive breakneck and unfurling. They speak large and small and in between. They're full of wantings and havings and convey a sense of every moment as a wellspring for greater attachment to the world." --Bob Hicok
"Diane Seuss is one of the country's most imaginative and significant poets." --Quraysh Ali Lansana
"For all its considerable invention, wit, tonal complexity, and vivid imagery--not to mention its economy and concentration--Diane Seuss's work is never content to settle for craft. There is an insistently human connection to experience in each of her poems." --Stuart Dybek
Praise for Diane Seuss
In her electric new book, Diane Seuss speaks as a backwards Oracle, bringing the laser eye of aftermath to the 'archived selves': the one who 'looked up into the dark for something to bloom by, ' the one tenderized and traumatized by New York City in its days of junkie glory: boyfriend stealing her blind for a fix, encounters with William Burroughs and Andy Warhol, 'a column of chalk at dead center of the gallery.' These poems feel driven by a fury for correction: romantic ideal is delusion, the charisma of the poete maudit a huckster's sham. Seuss blazes up into the dark and dirty corners of youthful folly, in poems that are visually sharp and linguistically alive; her voice is lucid, earthy, mordant, and funny. No pity, no quarter, for the old self: 'Some of us claw our way to the bottom, ' Seuss writes, 'transcend downward. There at the hub / of the drain we swirl.'--Dana Levin on Diane Seuss

In her electric new book, Diane Seuss speaks as a backwards Oracle, bringing the laser eye of aftermath to the 'archived selves': the one who 'looked up into the dark for something to bloom by, ' the one tenderized and traumatized by New York City in its days of junkie glory: boyfriend stealing her blind for a fix, encounters with William Burroughs and Andy Warhol, 'a column of chalk at dead center of the gallery.' These poems feel driven by a fury for correction: romantic ideal is delusion, the charisma of the poete maudit a huckster's sham. Seuss blazes up into the dark and dirty corners of youthful folly, in poems that are visually sharp and linguistically alive; her voice is lucid, earthy, mordant, and funny. No pity, no quarter, for the old self: 'Some of us claw our way to the bottom, ' Seuss writes, 'transcend downward. There at the hub / of the drain we swirl.' "Dana Levin on Diane Seuss"

'Having noticed it, why not say it?' These words, like so many throughout this unforgettable collection, may someday be an epigraph in the book of a Diane Seuss disciple. They connote the kinetic candor of her work; the boldness of her insight, ecstasy, and melancholy. A great passion issues from the pages of "Four-Legged Girl." Titles often bleed into the poems as if emulating Seuss's junctions of head and body, thinking and feeling. This book is a wise, wild, continuous gift. It will make you lean in and listen; it will make you this poet's devotee. These poems are tremendous in every way. Diane Seuss: holy smoke! "Terrance Hayes on Diane Seuss"

These poems arrive breakneck and unfurling. They speak large and small and in between. They're full of wantings and havings and convey a sense of every moment as a wellspring for greater attachment to the world. "Bob Hicok on Diane Seuss"

Diane Seuss is one of the country's most imaginative and significant poets. "Quraysh Ali Lansana on Diane Seuss"

For all its considerable invention, wit, tonal complexity, and vivid imagery--not to mention its economy and concentration--Diane Seuss's work is never content to settle for craft. There is an insistently human connection to experience in each of her poems. "Stuart Dybek on Diane Seuss"

I love everything about these poems. The sound and flurry of them. Their acute, irresistible female intelligence. Their associative, sometimes hallucinatory swoops. Their infectious, irrepressible, sensual momentum. Their hypersensitive reverence for blazing detail you can't shake off. Seuss's ability to 'read' the inanimate objects that populate and rule our lives, in all their hushed, eloquent complexity, is breathtaking. Every line in every poem is bright, beautiful, devastating, and grave, alive with insistent surprises. "Amy Gerstler on Diane Seuss""

A richly improvisational poetry collection that leads readers through a gallery of incisive and beguiling portraits and landscapes. Pulitzer Prize finalist citation

In her electric new book, Diane Seuss speaks as a backwards Oracle, bringing the laser eye of aftermath to the 'archived selves': the one who 'looked up into the dark for something to bloom by, ' the one tenderized and traumatized by New York City in its days of junkie glory: boyfriend stealing her blind for a fix, encounters with William Burroughs and Andy Warhol, 'a column of chalk at dead center of the gallery.' These poems feel driven by a fury for correction: romantic ideal is delusion, the charisma of the poete maudit a huckster's sham. Seuss blazes up into the dark and dirty corners of youthful folly, in poems that are visually sharp and linguistically alive; her voice is lucid, earthy, mordant, and funny. No pity, no quarter, for the old self: 'Some of us claw our way to the bottom, ' Seuss writes, 'transcend downward. There at the hub / of the drain we swirl.' Dana Levin on Diane Seuss

'Having noticed it, why not say it?' These words, like so many throughout this unforgettable collection, may someday be an epigraph in the book of a Diane Seuss disciple. They connote the kinetic candor of her work; the boldness of her insight, ecstasy, and melancholy. A great passion issues from the pages of "Four-Legged Girl." Titles often bleed into the poems as if emulating Seuss's junctions of head and body, thinking and feeling. This book is a wise, wild, continuous gift. It will make you lean in and listen; it will make you this poet's devotee. These poems are tremendous in every way. Diane Seuss: holy smoke! Terrance Hayes on Diane Seuss

These poems arrive breakneck and unfurling. They speak large and small and in between. They're full of wantings and havings and convey a sense of every moment as a wellspring for greater attachment to the world. Bob Hicok on Diane Seuss

Diane Seuss is one of the country's most imaginative and significant poets. Quraysh Ali Lansana on Diane Seuss

For all its considerable invention, wit, tonal complexity, and vivid imagery--not to mention its economy and concentration--Diane Seuss's work is never content to settle for craft. There is an insistently human connection to experience in each of her poems. Stuart Dybek on Diane Seuss

I love everything about these poems. The sound and flurry of them. Their acute, irresistible female intelligence. Their associative, sometimes hallucinatory swoops. Their infectious, irrepressible, sensual momentum. Their hypersensitive reverence for blazing detail you can't shake off. Seuss's ability to 'read' the inanimate objects that populate and rule our lives, in all their hushed, eloquent complexity, is breathtaking. Every line in every poem is bright, beautiful, devastating, and grave, alive with insistent surprises. Amy Gerstler on Diane Seuss"

A richly improvisational poetry collection that leads readers through a gallery of incisive and beguiling portraits and landscapes. Pulitzer Prize finalist citation

In her electric new book, Diane Seuss speaks as a backwards Oracle, bringing the laser eye of aftermath to the 'archived selves': the one who 'looked up into the dark for something to bloom by, ' the one tenderized and traumatized by New York City in its days of junkie glory: boyfriend stealing her blind for a fix, encounters with William Burroughs and Andy Warhol, 'a column of chalk at dead center of the gallery.' These poems feel driven by a fury for correction: romantic ideal is delusion, the charisma of the poete maudit a huckster's sham. Seuss blazes up into the dark and dirty corners of youthful folly, in poems that are visually sharp and linguistically alive; her voice is lucid, earthy, mordant, and funny. No pity, no quarter, for the old self: 'Some of us claw our way to the bottom, ' Seuss writes, 'transcend downward. There at the hub / of the drain we swirl.' Dana Levin on Diane Seuss

'Having noticed it, why not say it?' These words, like so many throughout this unforgettable collection, may someday be an epigraph in the book of a Diane Seuss disciple. They connote the kinetic candor of her work; the boldness of her insight, ecstasy, and melancholy. A great passion issues from the pages of Four-Legged Girl. Titles often bleed into the poems as if emulating Seuss's junctions of head and body, thinking and feeling. This book is a wise, wild, continuous gift. It will make you lean in and listen; it will make you this poet's devotee. These poems are tremendous in every way. Diane Seuss: holy smoke! Terrance Hayes on Diane Seuss

These poems arrive breakneck and unfurling. They speak large and small and in between. They're full of wantings and havings and convey a sense of every moment as a wellspring for greater attachment to the world. Bob Hicok on Diane Seuss

Diane Seuss is one of the country's most imaginative and significant poets. Quraysh Ali Lansana on Diane Seuss

For all its considerable invention, wit, tonal complexity, and vivid imagery--not to mention its economy and concentration--Diane Seuss's work is never content to settle for craft. There is an insistently human connection to experience in each of her poems. Stuart Dybek on Diane Seuss

I love everything about these poems. The sound and flurry of them. Their acute, irresistible female intelligence. Their associative, sometimes hallucinatory swoops. Their infectious, irrepressible, sensual momentum. Their hypersensitive reverence for blazing detail you can't shake off. Seuss's ability to 'read' the inanimate objects that populate and rule our lives, in all their hushed, eloquent complexity, is breathtaking. Every line in every poem is bright, beautiful, devastating, and grave, alive with insistent surprises. Amy Gerstler on Diane Seuss

"

-A richly improvisational poetry collection that leads readers through a gallery of incisive and beguiling portraits and landscapes.---Pulitzer Prize finalist citation

-In her electric new book, Diane Seuss speaks as a backwards Oracle, bringing the laser eye of aftermath to the 'archived selves': the one who 'looked up into the dark for something to bloom by, ' the one tenderized and traumatized by New York City in its days of junkie glory: boyfriend stealing her blind for a fix, encounters with William Burroughs and Andy Warhol, 'a column of chalk at dead center of the gallery.' These poems feel driven by a fury for correction: romantic ideal is delusion, the charisma of the poete maudit a huckster's sham. Seuss blazes up into the dark and dirty corners of youthful folly, in poems that are visually sharp and linguistically alive; her voice is lucid, earthy, mordant, and funny. No pity, no quarter, for the old self: 'Some of us claw our way to the bottom, ' Seuss writes, 'transcend downward. There at the hub / of the drain we swirl.'---Dana Levin on Diane Seuss

-'Having noticed it, why not say it?' These words, like so many throughout this unforgettable collection, may someday be an epigraph in the book of a Diane Seuss disciple. They connote the kinetic candor of her work; the boldness of her insight, ecstasy, and melancholy. A great passion issues from the pages of Four-Legged Girl. Titles often bleed into the poems as if emulating Seuss's junctions of head and body, thinking and feeling. This book is a wise, wild, continuous gift. It will make you lean in and listen; it will make you this poet's devotee. These poems are tremendous in every way. Diane Seuss: holy smoke!---Terrance Hayes on Diane Seuss

-These poems arrive breakneck and unfurling. They speak large and small and in between. They're full of wantings and havings and convey a sense of every moment as a wellspring for greater attachment to the world.---Bob Hicok on Diane Seuss

-Diane Seuss is one of the country's most imaginative and significant poets.---Quraysh Ali Lansana on Diane Seuss

-For all its considerable invention, wit, tonal complexity, and vivid imagery--not to mention its economy and concentration--Diane Seuss's work is never content to settle for craft. There is an insistently human connection to experience in each of her poems.---Stuart Dybek on Diane Seuss

-I love everything about these poems. The sound and flurry of them. Their acute, irresistible female intelligence. Their associative, sometimes hallucinatory swoops. Their infectious, irrepressible, sensual momentum. Their hypersensitive reverence for blazing detail you can't shake off. Seuss's ability to 'read' the inanimate objects that populate and rule our lives, in all their hushed, eloquent complexity, is breathtaking. Every line in every poem is bright, beautiful, devastating, and grave, alive with insistent surprises.---Amy Gerstler on Diane Seuss


"A richly improvisational poetry collection that leads readers through a gallery of incisive and beguiling portraits and landscapes."--Pulitzer Prize finalist citation

"In her electric new book, Diane Seuss speaks as a backwards Oracle, bringing the laser eye of aftermath to the 'archived selves': the one who 'looked up into the dark for something to bloom by, ' the one tenderized and traumatized by New York City in its days of junkie glory: boyfriend stealing her blind for a fix, encounters with William Burroughs and Andy Warhol, 'a column of chalk at dead center of the gallery.' These poems feel driven by a fury for correction: romantic ideal is delusion, the charisma of the poete maudit a huckster's sham. Seuss blazes up into the dark and dirty corners of youthful folly, in poems that are visually sharp and linguistically alive; her voice is lucid, earthy, mordant, and funny. No pity, no quarter, for the old self: 'Some of us claw our way to the bottom, ' Seuss writes, 'transcend downward. There at the hub / of the drain we swirl.'"--Dana Levin on Diane Seuss

"'Having noticed it, why not say it?' These words, like so many throughout this unforgettable collection, may someday be an epigraph in the book of a Diane Seuss disciple. They connote the kinetic candor of her work; the boldness of her insight, ecstasy, and melancholy. A great passion issues from the pages of Four-Legged Girl. Titles often bleed into the poems as if emulating Seuss's junctions of head and body, thinking and feeling. This book is a wise, wild, continuous gift. It will make you lean in and listen; it will make you this poet's devotee. These poems are tremendous in every way. Diane Seuss: holy smoke!"--Terrance Hayes on Diane Seuss

"These poems arrive breakneck and unfurling. They speak large and small and in between. They're full of wantings and havings and convey a sense of every moment as a wellspring for greater attachment to the world."--Bob Hicok on Diane Seuss

"Diane Seuss is one of the country's most imaginative and significant poets."--Quraysh Ali Lansana on Diane Seuss

"For all its considerable invention, wit, tonal complexity, and vivid imagery--not to mention its economy and concentration--Diane Seuss's work is never content to settle for craft. There is an insistently human connection to experience in each of her poems."--Stuart Dybek on Diane Seuss

"I love everything about these poems. The sound and flurry of them. Their acute, irresistible female intelligence. Their associative, sometimes hallucinatory swoops. Their infectious, irrepressible, sensual momentum. Their hypersensitive reverence for blazing detail you can't shake off. Seuss's ability to 'read' the inanimate objects that populate and rule our lives, in all their hushed, eloquent complexity, is breathtaking. Every line in every poem is bright, beautiful, devastating, and grave, alive with insistent surprises."--Amy Gerstler on Diane Seuss