Into the Ruins bookcover

Into the Ruins

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Description

2024 revised edition, with several new poems. Into the Ruins confronts much of the human experience left out of the balance by postmodern poetry, often compared to the Alexandrians and the Neoterics, when writers similarly concentrated on the minor themes of personal life, while ignoring the challenging experience of the public realm. Suffused with a global tragic vision, into the ruins of the 20th Century, Glaysher has his gaze fixed firmly on the 21st.

"Out of the mass of recent poetry books, here is one you should read." -William Allegrezza, Jack Magazine

"A poet of great skill and integrity. A journey, a poetry, which asks us to bring together broken parts of our cultures (both East and West) and search for a new identity, perhaps a new world order. His finely crafted poems are accessible and have a purpose that needs to be heard." -Margo LaGattuta, WPON, "Art in the Air"

FROM the Preface:

"The work of such artists as Francisco Goya in his war paintings and Los Caprichos, Kaethe Kollwitz's drawings, Wilfred Owen's poems of WWI, Randall Jarrell's "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner," and many of the poems of Robert Hayden, a fellow Detroiter, were powerful examples and influences on me that spoke to my sense of life and helped open the way forward for me as a poet."

Product Details

PublisherEarthrise Press
Publish DateMay 15, 2009
Pages88
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9780967042190
Dimensions8.5 X 5.5 X 0.2 inches | 0.3 pounds

About the Author

Frederick Glaysher is an epic poet, rhapsode, poetcritic, and author or editor of ten books. He has been a Fulbright-Hays and NEA scholar on China and India. He studied writing under a private tutorial, at the University of Michigan, with the poet Robert Hayden and edited Hayden's poetry and prose.He holds a bachelor's and a master's degree from the University of Michigan, the latter in English, and for a decade taught at several colleges and universities.He lived for more than fifteen years outside Michigan-in Japan, where he taught at Gunma University in Maebashi; in Arizona, on the Colorado River Indian Tribes Reservation, site of one of the largest internment camps for Japanese Americans during WWII; in Illinois, on the central farmlands and on the Mississippi; ultimately returning to his suburban hometown of Rochester, Michigan. He has given over sixty epic poetry readings and performances, several in theatres, in the USA, Canada, and Scotland.

Reviews

"A poet now whose work and dedication to a demanding and difficult art I admire; a man who has the gift of inner grace." -Robert Hayden

"Out of the mass of recent poetry books, here is one you should read." -Jack Magazine

"A poet of great skill and integrity. A journey, a poetry, which asks us to bring together broken parts of our cultures (both East and West) and search for a new identity, perhaps a new world order. His finely crafted poems are accessible and have a purpose that needs to be heard."

-Margo LaGattuta, WPON, "Art in the Air"

"A poetic reflection on postmodern life, with a particular focus on the limitations of both Eastern and Western thought. Collectively offers a higher path to universality for our future." -EdwardHamilton

"A litany of horrors updating Eliot's Waste Land, the book upbraids poets for turning inward only to concerns of the self." -North American Review

"His poetry is fluid and rhythmic, thoughtful and provocative." -Main Street Rag


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