Moving House: Poems

Summary
The poems in Moving House are grounded in the sometimes haunted landscapes of South Carolina, a setting rich with the flavors of ripe peaches and tomatoes and fresh-caught shrimp. The speaker of these poems turns her attention to the ordinary objects of her Southern home, seeing artistry in the scales of a fish, the pearly buttons of a linen shirt, a missed eclipse, a sprig of morning glory run wild. In the interaction between story, history, family, and memory, these poems find meaning rooted in the land, a source of both fear and wonder.
Similar Books
-
The Sorrows of Young Werther and Selected Writings
by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
-
I Knew a Phoenix: Sketches for an Autobiography
by May Sarton
-
Cawdor & Medea
by Robinson Jeffers
-
Second Growth
by Wallace Stegner
-
Vagabond's House
by Don Blanding
-
Sorgemusik för frimurare
by Lars Gustafsson
-
Late
by Cecilia Woloch
-
Sippewissett: Or, Life on a Salt Marsh
by Tim Traver
-
Living by Water: True Stories of Nature and Spirit
by Brenda Peterson
-
Tales Out of School
by Benjamin Taylor
-
YellowBlack: The First Twenty-One Years of a Poet's Life
by Haki R. Madhubuti
-
Walking Back Up Depot Street: Poems
by Minnie Bruce Pratt
-
Gone Home: Southern Folk Gravestone Art
by Suzanne Solomon
-
The Shino Suite: Japanese-American Poetry
by Ronald Phillip Tanaka
-
Do Not Peel the Birches
by Fleda Brown
-
Connemara Moonshine
by Mark Gibbons
-
House
by Mariela Griffor
-
Petitions for Immortality: Scenes from the Life of John Keats
by Robert Cooperman
-
Next to a River
by Jeff Munnis
-
Markers And Mysteries
by Don Frantz