In Country

(Author)
Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$17.00  $15.81
Publisher
BOA Editions
Publish Date
Pages
104
Dimensions
5.9 X 8.8 X 0.5 inches | 0.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781942683704

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About the Author
Hugh Martin grew up in northeast Ohio and served six years in the Army National Guard as an M1A1 Tanker. A veteran of the Iraq War, Hugh is the author of In Country (BOA Editions, 2018), The Stick Soldiers (BOA Editions, 2013, winner of the A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize) and So, How Was the War (Kent State University Press, 2010). He carries degrees from Muskingum University and Arizona State University. A recipient of a Wallace Stegner Fellowship from Stanford University, a Sewanee Writers' Conference Fellowship, and a Yaddo Residency, he was the inaugural winner of the Iowa Review Jeff Sharlet Award for Veterans. His essays and poetry have appeared in PBS NewsHour, The New Yorker, The New York Times, Grantland, American Poetry Review, and The Kenyon Review. He was the 2014-15 Emerging Writer Lecturer at Gettysburg College and is currently teaching at Ohio University where he's completing a Ph.D in creative writing.
Reviews

This is a poetry of small detail and large design. At one level, the guns, wasted terrains, and grinding dailiness of violence surprise and engage. The meticulous craft of detail allows the reader to become both witness and participant. But at a deeper level, the true power and presence of this book, from poem to poem, lies in its offering of the unimaginable to imagination. These are certainly war poems, providing depth and texture to the category. But they are also proof of the hard-won accord that can exist between experience and language, which here lends a memorable force to so many of these poems." --Eavan Boland

"With war, the imagination is drawn to spectacle, which these poems are not--and in that way, they help us to understand the unspectacular horror of the regular. 'There was never that black bowling ball, a burning fuse / waving its tail, ' is clear enough, but followed with the more devastating extension of experience, 'No bombs but / in things.' These clearly important poems disabuse us from thinking of war as we may have--as games, as movies, as acts of what we are convinced is the imagination, having played war as kids. These poems change the reader by offering drama where it is least expected. They are not imagined." --Alberto Ríos

"In Country is an astonishing tapestry. I know Randall Jarrell would have loved to review this book, detailing the half-dozen obvious masterpieces--insisting that human memory elevated by the most talented writers has something of the sacraments in it. Human, brilliant, this is truly yet another important book by Hugh Martin." --Norman Dubie