Walking Lorton Bluff by Paul Stroble

$19.99

 

A “mild promise of heaven”—that’s what the characters in these marvelous poems seek to understand. With people known and unknown, brave seekers whose emblems, dreams, and graves might vanish in time or in a Holocaust, these poems are history made into art. Paul Stroble connects his historical search and long-gone relatives to John Brown and Elie Wiesel, Emmett Till and Lincoln, Dr. King and Darwin, then and now. Paul Stroble has a wonderful voice like no one else writing today.

–Thomas Dukes, author of Baptist Confidential and Sugar Blood Jesus.

 

In his book-length poem Walking Lorton Bluff, Paul Stroble turns his attention to his own genealogy as his family history intersects American history. While his forbearers buried a beloved father, Darwin was changing science, slavery ravaged our country, and Abraham Lincoln considered the presidential office. But these are quiet poems, in the best possible sense, poems that ask us to be still and listen to our own pasts, to the grounds we walk on, to how our personal and political histories continue to shape our lives. “Where is God/ in the far country/ of our muddy boots?” Stroble writes. And, “I choose flowers/ for your unknown grave.” This is a lovely, politically engaged, and personally rich poetry book that asks us to remember our pasts as we continue to forge our futures.

–Andrea Scarpino, author of What the Willow Said As It Fell and Once Upon Wing Lake

 

 

Description

Walking Lorton Bluff

by Paul Stroble

$19.99, Full-length, paper

978-1-64662-325-9

2020

Paul Stroble teaches at Webster University and Eden Theological Seminary. A native of Vandalia (Fayette County), Illinois, he has written several books. His website is paulstroble.com. His previous chapbooks with Finishing Line Press are Dreaming at the Electric Hobo (2015), Little River (2017), Small Corner of the Stars (2017), and Backyard Darwin (2019).

Jesus said to him, “‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.'” (Matt. 22:37-39, Deut. 6:5, Lev. 19:18b)

 

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