Pocket Universe: Poems

(Author)
Available
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Product Details
Price
$20.95  $19.48
Publisher
LSU Press
Publish Date
Pages
84
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.2 inches | 0.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780807175835

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About the Author

Nancy Reddy is the author of Double Jinx, a winner of the National Poetry Series, and coeditor of The Long Devotion: Poets Writing Motherhood. She is the recipient of a fellowship from the Sewanee Writers' Conference and grants from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and the Sustainable Arts Foundation.

Reviews

"Nancy Reddy's Pocket Universe is a wildly powerful and searingly honest meditation on the ways in which anxiety and wonder intersect at the nexus of motherhood. These poems unsparingly and vividly chronicle the speaker's corporeal postpartum experiences, while simultaneously reaching backwards into history and outwards into space--invoking everything from Insta-mommies to Pliny the Elder to Queen Victoria to celestial light--to remind us of our fragility and resilience in the face of all of the dangers caregiving in the world engenders."

--Erika Meitner, author of Useful Junk

"In Pocket Universe, Nancy Reddy occupies the animal body: 'primates lick the amniotic fluid / from the dirt where the birthing mother spills it. . . .' She drops us into the blood of it, and we primates lick and rub these gorgeous images of brutal birth over our terrible, miraculous bodies. Reddy burrows into the unspoken with the wildness of a writer, a mother."

--Jan Beatty, author of American Bastard

"Nancy Reddy picks up Diotima's argument from Plato's Symposium that creation and procreation allow us to partake in immortality and the Good. These many labors--painful, painstaking--are the subject of the luminous Pocket Universe. In moving, discerning poems, Reddy reveals how the most intimate domestic spaces and our bodies themselves connect to the stars; how family matters share with historical, political matters and to dark matter itself. The fact that we're here on this planet to love and fail each other is an 'accident of the most fantastic luck.' With both tender and cruel examples, with pens, signs, fossils, sonograms, and telescopes, the poet shows how we are bound to each other through love, gravity, anguish, and devotion. Reddy's affecting vision about motherhood and making art details 'how many things there were / to be bad at' and astonishes us with 'the things that actually matter.'"

--Camille Guthrie, author of Diamonds