Motherland: Poems

Available

Product Details

Price
$19.95  $18.55
Publisher
Able Muse Press
Publish Date
Pages
126
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.3 inches | 0.43 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781773490434

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About the Author

Sally Thomas's poetry, fiction, and essays have appeared in The New Yorker, The New Republic, First Things, Sonora Review, Southern Poetry Review, Dappled Things, The Lost Country, Windhover, and numerous other journals. Her fiction has been shortlisted for the Tuscany Prize for Catholic Fiction and the J.F. Powers Prize for Short Fiction. She is the author of two previous collections of poetry: Brief Light: Sonnets and Other Small Poems ( Lancelot Books, 2012), and Fallen Water (Finishing Line Press, 2015). After sojourns in Utah and Great Britain (the setting for the poems in this collection), she makes her home in the Western Piedmont of North Carolina.

Reviews

A core of spiritual knowledge resides in the poems of Sally Thomas's Motherland-- knowledge that might seem strange to the poet herself, in fact, though it definitely resides in her, and radiates throughout this collection. Motherland is the perfect title, since the poet, herself a mother, regards all her human occupations as native and yet mysterious, occurring in a place which is both foreign and familiar. The final sequence, on Richeldis of Walsingham, includes lines that describe the expression of that knowledge, as "the eloquence/ Of the small river moving always forward to the unseen/ Sea." Motherland is a book of the presence--radiant, benevolent, challenging--for which there is often no word, except as we find in poetry, like the poetry of Sally Thomas."
--Mark Jarman, author of The Heronry

The poems of Sally Thomas are poems in which the act of looking at the world in all its depth and complexity is just about as close as possible to being fully realized in the corresponding "world" of poetic language and form. And the verses are compelling because in every line something is at stake: our very understanding of creation, the human condition, and the mystery of thought and its language that link us, however imperfectly, to what may be called the given world. As Thomas says in "Frost," "Tricky winter light and my own eye/ Bend the world, if not to beauty, then/ To strangeness."
--David Middleton (from the foreword), author of The Fiddler of Driskill Hill

In her most recent collection of poems, Motherland, Sally Thomas gives us a world we live in but, alas, too often don't seem to see. So much is lost, these poems tell us, even as they manage to reinstate and re-imagine these losses for us. All poetry is elegiac, even as it can, in the hands of a serious poet, celebrate the very world which for all of us keeps slipping away in the great wheel of time. Then too there is her mastery of poetic form--among these the sonnet, the villanelle, the couplet, and her unparalleled command of rhyme and slant rhyme. What a delight to discover a poet who has found a way to allow the sacred and the sacramental inform her poems in a surprising range of contemporary idioms.
--Paul Mariani, author of Epitaphs for the Journey