Brother Fire: Poems

15.00 JOD

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Description

In this rich collection, W. S. Di Piero seeks the spirit and substance of illumination in all its forms. He finds meaning, or shows us how we attempt to do so, in the rituals and events that mark our year–the Fourth of July, Halloween, New Year’s Eve–and in the ordinary activities of mowing, dancing, drinking, trying to stay warm. “The Kiss” recounts how, as a young man, the poet was not called to the priesthood; in “Prayer Meeting,” he recalls watching his mother iron, with her “hopeless routine longing,” and declares, “I wanted more than what I prayed for.” For all their simplicity, Di Piero’s direct, often conversational turns of phrase reveal a world aflame with troubles, with love, with surprising lyrical epiphanies.Didn’t You Say Desire Islike the elephant fogshredded northa white sun going downBessemers firedthrough clouds horizonedon my dog-eared stackIt feels good and rightto waste earnest hoursof an early evening’sdaylight saving timein uncertainty and wantthese cranky climateschanging in us while wehaven’t started dinner yet.

Additional information

Weight0.14 kg
Dimensions0.71 × 15.04 × 3.80 cm
Language
Format Old`

Pages

96

Publisher

Imprint

Year Published

2006-1-17

by

Publication City/Country

USA

ISBN 10

0375710493

About The Author

W. S. Di Piero was born in South Philadelphia in 1945. He is the author of eight books of poetry, as well as four volumes of translations. He writes about art for the San Diego Reader and has published three collections of essays and criticism on art, literature, and personal experience. He has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts grant, and a Lila Wallace—Reader’s Digest Writers’ Award. He lives in San Francisco and teaches at Stanford University.W. S. Di Piero’s Skirts and Slacks is available in Knopf paperback.

Excerpt From Book

Didn’t You Say Desire Islike the elephant fogshredded northa white sun going downBessemers firedthrough clouds horizonedon my dog-eared stackIt feels good and right to waste earnest hoursof an early evening’sdaylight savings timein uncertainty and wantthese cranky climates changing in us while wehaven’t started dinner yet.

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