Woman Without Umbrella

Backorder
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$15.95  $14.83
Publisher
Four Way Books
Publish Date
Pages
84
Dimensions
6.0 X 0.3 X 8.8 inches | 0.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781935536246
BISAC Categories:

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
VICTORIA REDEL is the author of two previous books of poetry and three books of fiction. She teaches at Sarah Lawrence College.
Reviews
Publishers Weekly"
Winning and elegant at its best, unified and honest throughout, this third collection from Redel (Swoon) follows the poet and a brace of her characters through romantic and familial episodes, from youth to late middle age, from moments when everything seems new to babies grown, gone from home, death/ of an old school friend. A beautifully unguarded poem entitled Today, We re This World s Darling concludes by praising (without divulging) Those gorgeous, scandalous/ tender words you say to me each morning. Redel is also a novelist, and often her poems (most no more than a page) try to reconcile the impulse to tell stories with the lyric drive to refine and strip down: her language may not sparkle on its own, but situations give it life. Some of her best works are prose poems. In one, a grandfather shoots a favorite donkey out of spite; in another, girls make prank distress calls from a pay phone, dialing up another random number to make them listen to us again. Publishers Weekly"
Poet and novelist Redel plays evocatively with narrative expectations in her third poetry collection...Middle-aged speakers abound in this collection, contemplative and rueful but also hopeful. Easy Living, one of the collection s most resonant poems, pays homage to a recently deceased friend who approached dying by delighting in everyday encounters. Redel s speakers are edging toward 50 and beyond, but they discuss courtship and eros with an amazed, almost innocent tone. Kissing occurs frequently, its lyrical descriptions lingering metaphorically for the reader. While some of the poems insist too much on allegory, the majority skillfully and merrily summon life from even the most desiccated matter. In The End, a divorcing couple lies in bed and reviews their marriage through a dazzling parade of personifications. Publishers Weekly"
"Winning and elegant at its best, unified and honest throughout, this third collection from Redel (Swoon) follows the poet and a brace of her characters through romantic and familial episodes, from youth to late middle age, from moments when everything seems new to "babies grown, gone from home," "death/ of an old school friend." A beautifully unguarded poem entitled "Today, We're This World's Darling" concludes by praising (without divulging) "Those gorgeous, scandalous/ tender words you say to me each morning." Redel is also a novelist, and often her poems (most no more than a page) try to reconcile the impulse to tell stories with the lyric drive to refine and strip down: her language may not sparkle on its own, but situations give it life. Some of her best works are prose poems. In one, a grandfather shoots a favorite donkey out of spite; in another, girls make prank distress calls from a pay phone, 'dialing up another random number to make them listen to us again.'"-- "Publishers Weekly" (10/1/2012 12:00:00 AM)
"Poet and novelist Redel plays evocatively with narrative expectations in her third poetry collection...Middle-aged speakers abound in this collection, contemplative and rueful but also hopeful. 'Easy Living, ' one of the collection's most resonant poems, pays homage to a recently deceased friend who approached dying by delighting in everyday encounters. Redel's speakers are edging toward 50 and beyond, but they discuss courtship and eros with an amazed, almost innocent tone. Kissing occurs frequently, its lyrical descriptions lingering metaphorically for the reader. While some of the poems insist too much on allegory, the majority skillfully and merrily summon life from even the most desiccated matter. In 'The End, ' a divorcing couple lies in bed and reviews their marriage through a dazzling parade of personifications."-- "Publishers Weekly" (10/1/2012 12:00:00 AM)