Notes on the Creation by David Kann
$14.99
It’s certainly unlike anything else out there in the poetry world — at least, anything in my surreal-modern post-Ashbery corner of it — so I must give the MS full credit for the courage of its stylistic convictions. The tradition of Gerard Manley Hopkins is alive and well in these poems, along with the physicality of someone like James Dickey, with, perhaps, some of the thunder and heat of early Delmore Schwartz.
–James Cushing
This collection manages to encompass the ongoing paradox of creation and destruction. At the macro level some poems describe the vast, seven-step process of creation as offered in Genesis, their rich language and headlong momentum reflecting the violence and erotic lushness of the original mythology, while other poems focus on micro immediacies such as the speaker’s son’s first solo swim, or a dying bee. Together they revere the natural world but also take its Creator to task for allowing events such as the Holocaust, and ultimately they sympathize with a God who is “just another entity trying to get by” like the rest of us in a world full of human error and “betrayed stewardship.” Skeptical, despairing, awed and sometimes angry, these poems nevertheless embrace a flawed “creation” and reflect a persistent hope for its survival.
–Leslie Ullman, author of The You That All Along Has Housed You and Library of Small Happines
Description
Notes on the Creation
by David Kann
$14.99, paper
978-1-64662-494-2
2021
David Kann is a newly retired professor emeritus, having spent more years than he cares to admit to teaching literature at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. He has had poetry published in such journals as Lunch Ticket, Forge, Fourth River and Red Coyote. His chapbook, The Language of the Farm, won the Five Oaks Press 2015 Our Wish for Blue contest. Two subsequent chapbooks, At Fernald School and Blues for Pip have ben published by Finishing Line Press.
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