Pillow-Stones by Renée Ruderman

(1 customer review)

$17.99

 

With lush and intricate imagery, Renée Ruderman captures Jewish and Jewish-American intergenerational experiences and memories in Pillow-Stones. The poems in this chapbook act as vignettes, offering intimate examinations of mourning loss and healing from tragedy as well as embracing truth and finding the sacredness that exists in all things living. It’s beautiful. It’s powerful.

–Julia Nguyen, Former Editor of Metrosphere, the creative writing publication of Metropolitan State University of Denver and 2022 Honored Graduate of Metropolitan State University of Denver

 

Renée Ruderman’s collection Pillow-Stones is characterized by rich imagery that evokes real and imagined memories of the past. A plethora of impressionist glimpses allows for the lyrical I’s emotions to unfold and provides a strong sense of moment and place. Ruderman’s poem “Mikveh” offers a unique combination of the Jewish woman’s sense of obligation to perform the traditional ritual bath with a positive affirmation of female sensuality while simultaneously commemorating a space of medieval Jewish history.

–Dr. Claudia Görg, Professor in American Studies at Johannes Gutenberg Universität, Obama Institute for Transnational American Studies, Mainz, Germany

 

Renée Ruderman’s poetry is both painterly and musical, intimately in touch with the world at hand. As when she presents an abecedarian poem about the Carnival Fountain in Mainz, Germany:

 

“Niches and mouths dribble, spray water

On each other, and masks, breasts, twisted in the

Pandemonium and hullabaloo,

Quipping, quaffing in the brouhaha….”

 

Her canny interweaving of sight and sound, emotion and intellect, make each poem here an invocation of what Blake called “sweet delight”—something we are all need more of these days.

–Joe Hutchison, Poet Laureate of Colorado 2014-2019 and author of 19 poetry collections

 

 

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Description

Pillow-Stones

by Renée Ruderman

Paper
$17.99
979-8-88838-333-9
2023
“Pillow-Stones” is a collage of poems that reconstructs memories of a distant and not-so-distant past occupied by the poet’s German-Jewish heritage and her deeply-held feelings about loss, woman-hood, and her rebellion against religion. Each poem expresses an awakening and an intensification of what it means to survive and to thrive in the shadows of a world where, today, many people are unaware of the Holocaust and Germany’s Nazi past.

Renée Ruderman is an English Professor Emerita from Metropolitan State University of Denver who has two published books: Poems from the Rooms Below and Certain Losses, and the forthcoming Pillow-Stones, a number of prizes, numerous publications (See Acknowledgements page), and a black cat. During two sabbaticals she taught poetry classes in the Czech Republic and Germany respectively. She’s originally from New York City and loves urban as well as nature-filled environments.

 

 

1 review for Pillow-Stones by Renée Ruderman

  1. Michael Jai Grant (verified owner)

    This is art. These powerful words will take you on an emotional journey as Ruderman masterfully conjures and weaves her imagery into a sumptuous and precise terrain. I navigated her world with delight, concern, and immense appreciation. “Home Work” is one of my favorites, a compelling piece with phrases that evoke both the disturbance and appreciation of her mother and home. Psychological, mesmerizing, rich, fluid, and fully accessible.

    I don’t know many people who enjoy poetry, and I myself am guilty of typically sidestepping the genre for my (sadly) limited reading hours. Some see poetry as cryptic, overbearing or unnecessarily challenging. Many nowadays require a three-act story with a car chase or a spaceship or a murderous twist. This neglect of one’s imagination—one’s heart!—is easily remedied in the capable hands of a master-poet like Renée Ruderman. Devote your energy and immerse yourself in these magical 27 pages. I did, and then I turned around and did it again because there is true beauty and wonder here.

    If you read but one book of poetry this year, this must be the one!

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