The True Account of Myself as a Bird

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Product Details
Price
$18.00  $16.74
Publisher
Penguin Books
Publish Date
Pages
112
Dimensions
5.91 X 8.9 X 0.47 inches | 0.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780143137245

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About the Author
Robert Wrigley is the author of eleven collections of poetry, including, most recently, Box (2017). His earlier books have been awarded the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award, the Poetry Center Book Award, the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Book Award, and the Poets' Prize, and he is the recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. He lives in the woods near Moscow, Idaho, with his wife, the author Kim Barnes.
Reviews
Praise for The True Account of Myself as a Bird

"Robert Wrigley is as lavish with the music of his syllables as he is with the descriptions they compose of the natural world and where it meets the human one. He considers aging, the chaos of Trump's America and 'the ever-developing dazzling dust of earth' in these Frostian meditations. In his poems, Wrigley is always friendly and always, even in anger or pain, celebratory."
--NPR's "Books We Love"

"With poems playful and serious, employing free verse and traditional forms, Robert Wrigley insists across time, distance, and every chasm that we are, somehow, one another. What at this moment could be harder to say? What could ever be truer? And Wrigley means we in that widest, truest sense--butterflies, boulders, the nondescript neighbor also named Bob: all beings here are allowed their worth and meaning and song."
--Orion Magazine

"Worlds come together in Robert Wrigley's new collection, The True Account of Myself as a Bird, taking surprising leaps of dare and faith inside every turn, and rituals of becoming traverse borders of mind and flesh, as each word grooves. And it is a felt, lived music that runs a binding seam through human lives so natural and true."
--Yusef Komunyakaa, author of Night Animals

"An extended epiphanic fireworks show of the ordinary . . . I will be immersed again and again and will get these glimpses of life through Wrigley's singular attention to surroundings and nature, to memory, to the sweet, comic vagaries of aging, to the things and people he loves, and most of all, to language and to all the meaning and music he pulls from it."
--Jess Walter

Praise for Robert Wrigley's previous collection, Box

"Quietly enlightening . . . Box thoughtfully considers how human beings, relationships, and the physical world are constrained by time, mortality, and other invisible forces . . . Wrigley meditates on the fragility and strength of nature; the search for transcendence and connection; the objects people keep and pass on; and how various landscapes can trap or inspire the soul."
--The Washington Post

"These poems are masterful in how they navigate time, molding memory into new understanding."
--St. Louis Post-Dispatch