The Boatloads
Dan Albergotti
(Author)
Edward Hirsch
(Foreword by)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
Selected by Edward Hirsch as the winner of the 2007 A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize.
Product Details
Price
$16.00
$14.88
Publisher
BOA Editions
Publish Date
April 01, 2008
Pages
92
Dimensions
6.25 X 8.86 X 0.29 inches | 0.37 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781934414033
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Dan Albergotti's poems have appeared in The Cincinnati Review, Shenandoah, The Southern Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and elsewhere. He is a graduate of the MFA Program at UNC Greensboro where he was poetry editor of The Greensboro Review. He currently serves as Coordinator of Creative Writing at Coastal Carolina University where he teaches creative writing and literature.
Reviews
"The poems of The Boatloads live in this intersection where antiquity intersects modernity, where the sacred intersects the profane, where faith collides with truth."
--Kerry Krouse, in Rattle (April 2009) "The magic of this book lies in the consistent, awe-inducing leaps and images that Albergotti makes, poem after poem, page after page." --Craig Beaven, in Blackbird (spring 2009) "In The Boatloads, the reader confronts the notion that the book of life is generated by an absent god wresting forth beautiful songs from his pining creation." --Virginia Konchan, in Galatea Resurrects (fall 2009) "The Boatloads confronts the paradox of the spiritual quest: if there is no God, the world is no less beautiful; if there is a God, the world is no less cruel." --Sian Griffiths, in The Georgia Review (winter 2009)
--Kerry Krouse, in Rattle (April 2009) "The magic of this book lies in the consistent, awe-inducing leaps and images that Albergotti makes, poem after poem, page after page." --Craig Beaven, in Blackbird (spring 2009) "In The Boatloads, the reader confronts the notion that the book of life is generated by an absent god wresting forth beautiful songs from his pining creation." --Virginia Konchan, in Galatea Resurrects (fall 2009) "The Boatloads confronts the paradox of the spiritual quest: if there is no God, the world is no less beautiful; if there is a God, the world is no less cruel." --Sian Griffiths, in The Georgia Review (winter 2009)