| Author/Contributor(s): | Collier, Michael |
| Publisher: | Ecco |
| Date: | 4/17/2002 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
A new collection of poetry by the director of the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, which celebrates its seventy-fifth anniversary in 2000. "Dark splendor" are the words Edward Hirsch uses to describe the poems of the award-winning author Michael Collier. Collier's new work balances on the ledge between the everyday and the unknown, revealing the hidden depths of relationships. The poems in THE LEDGE are narrative and colloquial, musical and crystalline, at once intimate and sharp-edged. They render the world beautifully mysterious as they slide into unexpected emotional territory. A son loses his father's favorite hammer, and with it his trust. In "The Wave," the enthusiastic crowd at a baseball game rises and sits in frightening unison, belying their hopeful cheering. In "Fathom and League," a dive two miles deep in the Pacific reveals the submerged volcanoes of the ocean and the soul. In many of the poems, the familiar animal world - of dogs and sparrows and possums in the yard - transfigures the view through a window. As director of the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Collier has reinvigorated one of America's most important literary institutions. The artistry and directness of THE LEDGE confirm his place among the most significant poets of his generation.
This collection balances the colloquial and the profound, exploring:
- Lyrical and Accessible Poetry: With a voice that is both sharp-edged and intimate, Collier’s work is direct, clear, and deeply resonant.
- Memory and Loss: A son loses his father’s hammer, and with it his trust, in poems that find the weight of the past in ordinary objects.
- The Uncanny in the Everyday: A crowd’s cheer at a baseball game becomes a frightening ritual, and the familiar animals in the yard transfigure the view through a window.
- A Storied Poetic Voice: From the director of the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, a collection that confirms Michael Collier’s place as one of the most significant poets of his generation.