Lines of Flight

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Product Details
Price
$19.95  $18.55
Publisher
Able Muse Press
Publish Date
Pages
98
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.23 inches | 0.34 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780986533839
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Catherine Chandler, an American poet born in New York City and raised in Pennsylvania, completed her graduate studies at McGill University in Montreal, where she has lectured in the Department of Languages and Translation for many years. She is the winner of the Howard Nemerov Sonnet Award. Her poems, interviews, essays and English translations from French and Spanish have been published in numerous print and online journals and anthologies in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.
Reviews

Catherine Chandler's poems-I think particularly of the sonnet "Vermont Passage"-offer the reader a plain eloquence, a keen eye, and a graceful development of thought. Elsewhere in this fine book, she puts her gift s at the service of wit, as in the little anti-poetic poem "Supernova." Lines of Flight is altogether a lively performance.

- Richard Wilbur


One of the things that poetry-when it's very good-does better than anything else is to suggest conflicting things at the same time and confront the reader with the possibility that both may be true. This book, which is extraordinarily good, does that to perfection. . . . I love this book, and know that I will return to it again and again.

- Rhina P. Espaillat (from the "Foreword")


Catherine Chandler's Lines of Flight is a marvelously accomplished first collection. Even to call it a 'first collection' seems somehow misleading; it is a first collection as Housman's A Shropshire Lad was. These are poems that have been long meditated and patiently crafted; they are distillations of experience captured in exquisite measures. There seems to be no form of which Catherine Chandler is not a master, from quatrains and Sapphics to ballads and pantoums. She is an especially brilliant sonneteer. Her formal artistry is not on display for its own sake but is employed with oft en lacerating effect to probe "the hush/of who I am." These are poems steeped in the sorrows of lucidity. At the same ti me, she has a subtle eye for landscapes and foreign vistas, from Ushuaia to (even more exotic) Poughkeepsie. As she puts it, "Some things she loves for where they are." Her poems on natural things, particularly those on birds, are alive with the rush of wings. For, though she modestly denies it, she is a poet who can "explicate the texture of the air." Poem after poem offers what she calls "fugitive vignettes" and yet, despite her ironic title, there's nothing fugitive about her verse. These beautiful poems have been made to last.

- Eric Ormsby


In Lines of Flight, we hear an engaging and authoritative new voice. Catherine Chandler displays a dazzling command of poetic forms, writing skillfully in the sonnet, ballad stanza, rondel, villanelle, cento, tercets-but to enjoy her work, the reader doesn't have to be a fan of form. A keen observer of the natural world, she can also capture human life in all its harsh crudity (see "Boots" or "To the Man on Mansfield Street"). She writes with drive and force, and yet is able to convey what she calls "the delicate forensics of the heart." Her instrument has many strings. She looks to me like a poet of major promise.

- X.J. Kennedy