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    Saving Daylight

    Saving Daylight

    4.5 2

    by Jim Harrison


    eBook

    $10.99
    $10.99
     $12.99 | Save 15%

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      ISBN-13: 9781619320475
    • Publisher: Copper Canyon Press
    • Publication date: 11/06/2012
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 124
    • File size: 3 MB

    Jim Harrison is the author of thirty books, including Legends of the Fall, Dalva, and Shape of the Journey. His work has been translated into two dozen languages and produced as four feature-length films. In 2007, Mr. Harrison was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He divides his time between Montana and southern Arizona.

    Table of Contents

    Water3
    Cabbage4
    Mom and Dad5
    Night Dharma6
    Modern Times7
    Adding It Up13
    Young Love15
    The Movie16
    Livingston Suite18
    Hill32
    Buried Time35
    Angry Women38
    Before the Trip39
    Paris Television40
    Opal41
    The Man Who Looked for Sunlight42
    Alcohol43
    En Veracruz en 194144
    In Veracruz in 194145
    Dream Love46
    Flower, 200147
    Patagonia Poem48
    Reading Calasso49
    The Bear50
    Bars51
    Diabetes53
    Searchers54
    Mother Night55
    The Creek56
    Birds Again57
    Becoming58
    Portal, Arizona59
    Easter Morning60
    Corrido Sonorense62
    Sonoran Corrida63
    Older Love64
    Los viejos tiempos66
    The Old Days67
    Two Girls70
    The Little Appearances of God71
    Waves73
    Time74
    An Old Man75
    To a Meadowlark76
    November77
    Cold Poem78
    Invasive79
    On the Way to the Doctor's80
    Espanol82
    Spanish83
    Pico86
    The Short Course87
    Science91
    The Fish in My Life92
    A Letter to Ted & Dan93
    Effuvia96
    Joseph's Poem98
    Unbuilding99
    Suzanne Wilson101
    Current Events102
    Poem of War (I)103
    Poem of War (II)103
    Rachel's Bulldozer104
    After the War105
    Brothers and Sisters112
    Fence Line Tree113
    Saving Daylight114
    Incomprehension115
    Memorial Day117
    Letter Poem to Sam Hamill and Dan Gerber118
    Hakuin and Welch119
    L'envoi120
    Marching121
    About the Author123

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    Named to the Notable Books of the Year lists from The Kansas City Star and the Michigan Library Association.

    “Jim Harrison is a writer with immortality in him.”—The Times (London)

    “This is [Harrison’s] most robust, sure-footed, and blood-raising poetry collection to date.”—Booklist

    Jim Harrison—one of America’s most beloved writers—calls his poetry “the true bones of my life.” Although he is best known as a fiction writer, it is as a poet that Publishers Weekly famously called him an “untrammeled renegade genius.”

    Saving Daylight, Harrison’s tenth collection of poetry, is his first book of new poems in a decade. All of Harrison’s abundant passions for life are poured into suites, prose poems, letter-poems, and even lyrics for a mariachi band.

    The subjects and concerns are wide-ranging—from the heart-rending “Livingston Suite,” where a boy drowns in the local river and the body is discovered by the poet’s wife—to some of the most harrowing political poems of Harrison’s career. There is also a cast of creature characters—bears, dogs, birds, fish—as well as the woodlands, thickets, and occasional cities of Arizona, Montana, Michigan, France, and Mexico.

    “Imagination is my only possession,” Harrison once said. And Saving Daylight is an imagination in full, exuberant bloom.

    Jim Harrison is the author of over thirty books of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. His work has been translated into dozens of languages. Born and raised in Michigan, he now lives in Montana and Arizona.

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    Publishers Weekly
    Mountains and forests from the American West, oneiric apparitions and a hard-won, slightly bitter wisdom pervade this 10th book of poems from the prolific Harrison (Shape of the Journey), whose many prose works include Legends of the Fall. Harrison's passionate, sometimes uncontrolled poems portray his upbringing in northern Michigan and his long residence in the wilds of Montana, where "The moose/ down the road wears the black cloak of a god," and any small "community can drown in itself,/ then come to life again." His tough-guy tone and terse descriptions, along with his unpretentious free-verse line, might recall Gerald Stern or even Richard Hugo. Yet his leaps from topic to topic, his declamations and spontaneous, mystical utterances, suggest instead a Latin American influence-several poems appear both in English and in Spanish in facing-page translations, and several more pay tribute to the wild intuitions of Pablo Neruda. (Apr.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
    Library Journal
    He's better known as a novelist, but Harrison writes tough, meditative poetry that appeals to a wide audience, capturing hard-won wisdom in language often evoking the scary beauty of this country's Northwest. His tenth collection is blessed with both wildness and grace. (LJ2/15/06)


    —Barbara Hoffert
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