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Kirjailija

Eleanor Ross Taylor

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 2 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1999-2009, suosituimpien joukossa Late Leisure. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

2 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1999-2009.

Captive Voices

Captive Voices

Eleanor Ross Taylor; Ellen Bryant Voigt

Louisiana State University Press
2009
nidottu
Over nearly fifty years, Eleanor Ross Taylor has established herself as one of the foremost southern poets of her generation. Captive Voices gathers selections from Taylor's five previous books along with a generous helping of new poems. Scintillating, unusual, passionate, and profound, the poems range from contemporary pieces about a bag lady on a bus, to historical pieces about settlers held hostage and a wartime nurse caring for British wounded, to intensely personal poems about her dislike for her grandmother and worries about her son. The title poem - a real tour de force - explores the notion of captivity on several levels as it speaks to the suffering we all endure, some of which is of our own making. Decidedly regional yet determinedly universal, the poems in this remarkable volume, along with a foreword by Ellen Bryant Voigt, attest to the singular talent of a woman justly described as ""a poet of genius.
Late Leisure

Late Leisure

Eleanor Ross Taylor

Louisiana State University Press
1999
nidottu
In these fifty-five poems that compose Late Leisure, Eleanor Ross Taylor shares dramatic, symbolic, intensely personal outpourings of her evolving consciousness, ""myself capriciously ongoing"", as poet, woman, and elder. Though she has written throughout her life, it is now, in later years, that she blooms fullest, free of wifely and motherly occupations that nonetheless nurtured her artistry.Taylor's is a distinctly southern voice, audible in references to gardens and social ties and in folksy turns of phrase. But she wears a tremendously wide range of attitudes, confidence, independence, amazement, sarcasm, revelry, faith, a fascinating, reassuring testimony to vitality. Many of her poems in Late Leisure have to do with discerning, deciphering, discovering, and conversely with being lost or captive, and disappearing from the sight or earshot of others. For Taylor, these actions describe the mysteries of knowing her past and present selves and of plying the creative process.Suffusing the collection is the poet's penchant for solitude. Willfully, richly alone, Taylor paves her quiet way with brio: ""Always reclusive, / I'm constructing my own brierpatch. . . . / 'The blackberry, permitted its own way, / is an unmanageable plant.' Here's a / variety called Taylor: 'Season late, / bush vigorous, hardy . . . free from rust.' / That's it. Don't let my brierpatch rust.