en
Wendy Mnookin

What He Took

Giv mig besked når bogen er tilgængelig
Denne bog er ikke tilgængelig i streaming pt. men du kan uploade din egen epub- eller fb2-fil og læse den sammen med dine andre bøger på Bookmate. Hvordan overfører jeg en bog?
Beginning with an auto accident that occurred during a family outing that took the life of Ms. Mnookin’s father, the ensuing poems track the effect of that tragedy and loss, as the family heals from disaster, as the child grows up in a household with a stepfather and makes her uneasy way into adulthood, all under the shadow of a psychic uneasiness born of loss and impermanence.
Wendy Mnookin’s poetry has received awards from journals including The Comstock Review, Kansas Quarterly and New Millennium Writings. She was a 1999 recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship. She teaches poetry in Boston.
Also available by Wendy Mnookin To Get Here TP $12.50, 1–880238–73-X o CUSA
Denne bog er ikke tilgængelig i øjeblikket
36 trykte sider
Oprindeligt udgivet
2014
Udgivelsesår
2014
Har du allerede læst den? Hvad synes du om den?
👍👎

Citater

  • Menna Abu Zahrahar citeretfor 3 år siden
    recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, she has received awards for her poetry from The Comstock Review, Federal Poet, Harbinger, Kansas Quarterly, New Millennium Writings, Poet, and prn. In collaboration with Arts in Progress and the Massachusetts Cultural Council, she has taught poetry to children in Boston area schools. She has also taught poetry and creative writing at Boston College. She and her husband live in Newton, Massachusetts, where they have raised their three children.
  • Menna Abu Zahrahar citeretfor 3 år siden
    The Antigonish Review: “Father’s Glasses,” “On Thick White Paper,” “The Booth”;

    Boston College Magazine: “Almost Egypt”;

    Caprice: “Dust,” “Marooned”;

    Chester H. Jones National Poetry Competition: “When My Father Dies”;

    Cimarron Review: “What Lasts”;

    The Comstock Review (formerly Poetpourri): “Fontanel,” “Perfumes Stare at Themselves,” “Polio Summer,” “This Is Only Practice”;

    The Cortland Review (www.cortlandreview.com): “Let’s Do It This Year,” “Love Story,” “Scar”;

    Hurricane Alice: “Annie Oakley Blows Kisses to Her Audience: The sun sets, staining snow . . .”;

    Kansas Quarterly: “Ghost Flowers”;

    New Millennium Writings: “Shouldn’t He Have Done Something?”;

    Northwest Review: “Hives”; “We Get Married Again”;

    The Onset Review: “This Is It”;

    Oxford Magazine: “Mother In Her Black Lace Slip”;

    paragraph: “Windows”;

    Passages North: “In The Girls’ Room”;

    Poet Lore: “Hiding Places,” “I Can’t Find His Obituary on Microfilm”;

    Radcliffe Quarterly: “Annie Oakley Blows Kisses to Her Audience: I shoot the clay birds . . . ,” “World Series: Boston, 1986”;

    Sandscript: “His Fingers Vague as Wings”;

    Stuff: “How Men, How Women”;

    Web Del Sol (www.webdelsol.com): “I Refuse to Wear My Red Cardigan,” “What He Took”;

    West Branch: “Desire.”
  • Menna Abu Zahrahar citeretfor 3 år siden
    “Polio Summer” appeared in the anthology Boomer Girls: Poems by Women from the Baby Boom Generation, Gemin, Pamela and Sergi, Paula, editors, (University of Iowa Press, 1999). “When My Father Dies” (as “Before My Father Dies”) and “This Is It” (as “Plums”) were reprinted in Poetry Tonight (www.poetrytonight.com).

    Thanks to the editors who recognized some of the poems with awards: “Shouldn’t He Have Done Something?” (as “God And My Father on The Beach at San Pedro,” New Millennium Writings, 1998) and “Ghost Flowers” (as “Wintering Over,” Kansas Quarterly, 1994).
fb2epub
Træk og slip dine filer (ikke mere end 5 ad gangen)