
Ghost Man on Second
Erica Reid
(Author)Description
Winner of the 2023 Donald Justice Poetry Prize, selected by Mark Jarman, Ghost Man on Second centers on strained family relationships and the search for new homes.
Erica Reid's debut collection traces a daughter's search for her place in the world after estrangement from her parents. Reid writes, "It's hard to feel at home unless I'm aching." Growing from this sense of isolation, Reid's poems create new homes in nature, in mythology, and in poetic forms--including sestinas, sonnets, and golden shovels--containers that create and hold new realizations and vantage points.
Reid stands up to members of her family, asking for healing amid dissolving bonds. These poems move through emotional registers, embodying nostalgia, hurt, and hope. Throughout Ghost Man on Second, the poems portray Reid's active grappling with home and confrontation with the ghosts she finds there.
Product Details
Publisher | Autumn House Press |
Publish Date | March 29, 2024 |
Pages | 88 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781637680810 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.0 X 0.2 inches | 0.4 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Ghost Man on Second is an ambitious and finely-wrought first collection that exhibits Erica Reid's prowess in poetic form and figuration as well as deeply incisive observations on the nature of family and what and where home can be." --Colorado Review
"Ghost Man on Second gives us grief and endurance, loss and joy, transmuted by the play of verse and imagination into poetry. Its thematic concerns deal with an absent father, suggested by the book's title, the troubles and determination of a young mother alone, and how these conditions have affected their child. Dilemmas, hurts, yearnings, and elusive retrievals are magically changed by the poet's sophisticated technical skill into living poems, works of art that invite reading and rereading." --Mark Jarman, author of Zeno's Eternity
"The speaker of the poems that compose Erica Reid's Ghost Man on Second is well-acquainted with chaos and its antidote--'the diamond- / shaped cycle' of form, the capacity to tell the tale, to name, and poetry's cradling music. . . . One feels form's necessity, the pressure of truth upon it. Each formal experiment provides a nest for the ghost, the angel, and the neglected child that haunt this book. Now and then, a rough upbringing and its consequent emptiness can incite a rare capacity for seeing and chronicling what is. . . . This is a book to re-read, and cherish." --Diane Seuss, author of frank: sonnets
Earn by promoting books