av Alice Teeter
246,-
Alice Teeter's Book of Revelations is gentle and brutal, devoid of the supernatural and full of nature. Her poetry gives us a recipe, a warning, a hint at what is to come. Somehow she scares us and reassures us at the same time. - Franklin Abbott, poet and psychotherapistAlice Teeter combines both tremendous ambition and wonderful skill in her deft, notational, imagistic, and riveting long poem. Here, at the end takes readers on a journey they might not have thought of taking. This is a poem Basho might have written if he travelled through the world of Mad Max instead of over the Japanese mountains. So there's no Zen here. There's no peace. The coffee isn't fresh. The luggage is zipped up and crammed. The car lacks air conditioning. But it doesn't matter. Alice Teeter is driving and driving and the reader has his seatbelt on and can't believe what he sees.- Mike James, author of Portable LightAll my life long I've wondered what the end would be like. Now, thanks to Alice Teeter, I know. Thanks a lot, Alice! - Lewis Turco, author of The Book of FormsI want to begin with a confession. At first I was disinclined to like these poems. I have become quite curmudgeonly in my old age, and I am increasingly impatient with much of free verse. However, I do like these poems very much. I have read them over a number of times, and I find that they have grown on me...I have always admired your strong sense of detail...I enjoy [the poems] immensely.- Brian McAllister, Professor of English, Albany State UniversityAs someone who is convinced that the earth is about done with humans, I resonate with Alice Teeter's poetic elegy and farewell.- Elise Witt, Songwriter, Musician, Poet, Gardener