Moon Grammar

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4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$17.00  $15.81
Publisher
Slant Books
Publish Date
Pages
96
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.23 inches | 0.33 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781639821563
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Matthew Porto is an Italian-American poet from Long Island, NY. He holds a PhD in English from Texas Tech University and an MFA in poetry from Boston University. His first collection, Moon Grammar, appeared with Slant Books in 2024. He lives in Boston, MA, where he a professor of English at Berklee College of Music.
Reviews

Moon Grammar presents an exciting, distinctive poetic voice, with tremendous energies of truth and renewal along with formal command. In the violence and enigma of Genesis, or in the touristic ironies of Ezra Pound's grave in Venice, or in a domestic interior of long-ago Vermont, Matthew Porto is ingeniously alert, compelling, and unpredictable.

-Robert Pinsky, former Poet Laureate of the United States

Even when "there was nothing heroic about the harbor," Porto makes the raw material of place-Venice, Ithaka, Scranton-feel essential to the meaning of the past-as if the answers to impossible questions can be found if the poet can brave the act of "disturb[ing] its old air." In gorgeous elegies, Porto shows us that "a wound is an opportunity."

-Jasmine V. Bailey, author of Alexandria and Disappeared

Porto's poems reach across time and traditions not to resurface forgotten stories but to invite us into the knowledge that these stories already live within us. In verse which dashes effortlessly from companionship to eros, pub songs to awe at the sublime, Porto compels us to reconsider our experience of life on earth-life with one other. These poems seek to attune us to the signals of forces and presences beyond our comprehension and postulate the improbable: that these presences are likewise orienting themselves toward us.

-Eric Parkison, author of No Arcadia

There are moments in Moon Grammar when Matthew Porto's poems seem to have been composed in the shadow of an angel's wing, in their purity and directness. Porto's epiphanies, however, are recognizably our own. They are "muddy, augural, greased with sunlight," and resourcefully they seek an accommodation with our fallen condition. These poems are avid, intelligent, and humane.

-Karl Kirchwey, Professor of English and Creative Writing, Boston University