The Forage House

(Author)
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Product Details
Price
$17.95  $16.69
Publisher
Red Hen Press
Publish Date
Pages
88
Dimensions
5.83 X 8.74 X 0.24 inches | 0.25 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781597092708
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author

Tess Taylor has received writing fellowships from Amherst College, the American Antiquarian Society, the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, the International Center for Jefferson Studies, the Headlands Center for the Arts, and the MacDowell Colony. She holds graduate degrees in writing from New York University and Boston University. Her chapbook, The Misremembered World, was selected by Eavan Boland and published by the Poetry Society of America, and her poetry and nonfiction have appeared in The Atlantic, Boston Review, Harvard Review, Literary Imagination, The Times Literary Supplement, and The New Yorker. She currently reviews poetry for NPR's All Things Considered and teaches writing at the University of California, Berkeley. She lives in El Cerrito, California.

Reviews

"Tess Taylor's "The Forage House" is a brave and compelling collection that bears witness to the journey of historical discovery. Sifting through archives, artifact, and souvenir, Taylor presents a dialectic of what's recorded and what's not, unearthing the traces that give way to her own history--and a vital link to our shared American past. What's here and accounted for draws us powerfully toward what's absent; what seems complete here never is--something as fragmented as history in the language, as haunted too."
--Natasha Trethewey

"Ezra Pound's definition of the epic--'A poem containing history'--demands courage and intellectual range, as well as lyrical gifts. Tess Taylor meets that challenge in "The Forage House." A figure of epic scale, Taylor's Thomas Jefferson is tragic as well: 'ambitious foundering father.' The poise, candor and reach of this book--with a vision that embraces the enigmas of contemporary El Cerrito along with those of the slave-owner Jefferson--are deeply impressive."
--Robert Pinsky

"Document-gatherer, exorcist, mourner, pack-rat, and celebrant--Tess Taylor orients herself within her family's history of slave-owning in Virginia, their missionary zeal in India, and their displacement to California. A mini-history of our nation, her ambitious poems ignite fact into lyric flash as she implores her ancestors 'to explain / their America, their prodigal / half-remembered, always present pain.' "The Forage House" is a book of conscience and sensuous reckoning."
--Rosanna Warren


"In Tess Taylor's collection of poetry, American history is a garment woven from tattered bits of family lore and large swaths of imaginative inlays, so that which shines most is a spun strand of stunningly rich language."
--Major Jackson
"Tess Taylor's "The Forage House" is, among other things, a tribute to the human capacity to perceive the objects of one's attention--one's surroundings, things at hand, and even oneself--not merely a

Tess Taylor s "The Forage House" is a brave and compelling collection that bears witness to the journey of historical discovery. Sifting through archives, artifact, and souvenir, Taylor presents a dialectic of what s recorded and what s not, unearthing the traces that give way to her own history and a vital link to our shared American past. What s here and accounted for draws us powerfully toward what s absent; what seems complete here never is something as fragmented as history in the language, as haunted too.
Natasha Trethewey

Ezra Pound s definition of the epic A poem containing history demands courage and intellectual range, as well as lyrical gifts. Tess Taylor meets that challenge in "The Forage House." A figure of epic scale, Taylor s Thomas Jefferson is tragic as well: ambitious foundering father. The poise, candor and reach of this book with a vision that embraces the enigmas of contemporary El Cerrito along with those of the slave-owner Jefferson are deeply impressive.
Robert Pinsky

Document-gatherer, exorcist, mourner, pack-rat, and celebrant Tess Taylor orients herself within her family s history of slave-owning in Virginia, their missionary zeal in India, and their displacement to California. A mini-history of our nation, her ambitious poems ignite fact into lyric flash as she implores her ancestors to explain / their America, their prodigal / half-remembered, always present pain. "The Forage House" is a book of conscience and sensuous reckoning.
Rosanna Warren


In Tess Taylor s collection of poetry, American history is a garment woven from tattered bits of family lore and large swaths of imaginative inlays, so that which shines most is a spun strand of stunningly rich language.
Major Jackson
Tess Taylor s "The Forage House" is, among other things, a tribute to the human capacity to perceive the objects of one s attention one s surroundings, things at hand, and even oneself not merely as they appear in the present, but also as products of, and with, particular histories. These histories can never be retrieved in their entirety, much less with perfect certainty, and what we discover of them might turn out to be difficult to accept. Nonetheless, the sense that we live haunted by remains should be cultivated and celebrated as a redeeming human trait, one that will serve not only to fortify our grasp of the present, but also our commitment to the future. Few books in recent memory have taken up that task as scrupulously and artfully as this one. Timothy Donnelly"

Tess Taylor s The Forage House is a brave and compelling collection that bears witness to the journey of historical discovery. Sifting through archives, artifact, and souvenir, Taylor presents a dialectic of what s recorded and what s not, unearthing the traces that give way to her own history and a vital link to our shared American past. What s here and accounted for draws us powerfully toward what s absent; what seems complete here never is something as fragmented as history in the language, as haunted too.
Natasha Trethewey

Ezra Pound s definition of the epic A poem containing history demands courage and intellectual range, as well as lyrical gifts. Tess Taylor meets that challenge in The Forage House. A figure of epic scale, Taylor s Thomas Jefferson is tragic as well: ambitious foundering father. The poise, candor and reach of this book with a vision that embraces the enigmas of contemporary El Cerrito along with those of the slave-owner Jefferson are deeply impressive.
Robert Pinsky

Document-gatherer, exorcist, mourner, pack-rat, and celebrant Tess Taylor orients herself within her family s history of slave-owning in Virginia, their missionary zeal in India, and their displacement to California. A mini-history of our nation, her ambitious poems ignite fact into lyric flash as she implores her ancestors to explain / their America, their prodigal / half-remembered, always present pain. The Forage House is a book of conscience and sensuous reckoning.
Rosanna Warren


In Tess Taylor s collection of poetry, American history is a garment woven from tattered bits of family lore and large swaths of imaginative inlays, so that which shines most is a spun strand of stunningly rich language.
Major Jackson

Tess Taylor s The Forage House is, among other things, a tribute to the human capacity to perceive the objects of one s attention one s surroundings, things at hand, and even oneself not merely as they appear in the present, but also as products of, and with, particular histories. These histories can never be retrieved in their entirety, much less with perfect certainty, and what we discover of them might turn out to be difficult to accept. Nonetheless, the sense that we live haunted by remains should be cultivated and celebrated as a redeeming human trait, one that will serve not only to fortify our grasp of the present, but also our commitment to the future. Few books in recent memory have taken up that task as scrupulously and artfully as this one. Timothy Donnelly"