The Blues of Heaven: Poems

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Product Details
Price
$18.00  $16.74
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
70
Dimensions
5.9 X 8.8 X 0.3 inches | 0.31 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780822966548
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Barbara Ras is the author of the poetry collections Bite Every Sorrow (winner of the Walt Whitman Award and the Kate Tufts Discovery Award), One Hidden Stuff, and The Last Skin. She has received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation, among others. Her poems have appeared in the New Yorker, Tin House, Granta, and Orion, as well as in other magazines and anthologies. Ras has taught in the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College and at workshops nationally and internationally. She lives in San Antonio and is the founding director emerita of Trinity University Press.
Reviews
There's no predicting where Ras will lead us in her tightly constructed, complexly valenced poems exploring memories, yearning, risk, and loss. She revels in inversions, startling images, curious facts, provocative settings, and unexpected juxtapositions.-- "Booklist"
It is in this collection--the poems at once tender and world-weary, weathered but endlessly hopeful--that we see Ras at her best.-- "Sewanee Review"
The Blues of Heaven, by Barbara Ras, radiates with immense tenderness--here are poems of vivid painterly wonderment, perfect pacing and weight, elegantly woven counterpoints of shimmering imagery. How does she do this? A book of infinite love and depth.--Naomi Shihab Nye, author of Everything Comes Next
The color blue (cobalt, baby, wan, damn, recklessly blue) in Barbara Ras's latest collection, The Blues of Heaven, is so exquisitely employed, it's hard not to gush. Her poetry remains as capacious, as endlessly curious as ever. By turns elegiac, nostalgic, and outraged, Ras gives us the world--'a blue ball spinning at a 1000 mph'--in all its glorious imperfection.--Ellen Bass
The sweet and dark weight of being has never been more capably measured than in The Blues of Heaven. In poems about personal and national griefs, about the world at hand and the world that must be journeyed to, and about the creatures of creation and the tender, creatural self, Barbara Ras engages in acts of vision, ecstasy, and conscience. As the speaker in one poem declares, "I will work in fields of fire." And true, in the midst of a period in our human history that has been nearly unendurable, Ras has given us a book of extraordinary shining.--Rick Barot, author of The Galleons