Red Voice by Nancy Takacs
$14.99
In Red Voice, Nancy Takacs explores a voice of adventure and wisdom, of finding a way, through rough music and appetite. Her Echo’s breath is stopped by “the wrists of water lilies” and the necessity of the desert landscape that Takacs has lived in and loved for so many years, to reach a place where a lover must promise that “he will not speak until / it improves on silence.”
— Donna J. Long
Nancy Takacs brings Echo back to life in the poems of Red Voice. With lush,
sumptuous, sensual, down to earth imagery, she re-envisions Echo’s myth —
re-imagines how voice, life, self, can be re-sought, re-gained, and brought into alignment, oneness, with Nature, even in the context of this damaged world. From the start, we are drawn in, entangled, enchanted. Here, as throughout the body of her work, Nancy Takacs has a way of making language seem to spill onto the page: her soul, it seems, writes through her.
— Carol Henrikson
Nancy Takacs creates a current of language that carries us through an intense collage of wilderness, praising its bits and pieces—ocotillo, geode, hemlock, abalone, crushed trillium, deer bone, the bear. The voice of Echo thaws unleashing a deluge of imagistic power. Like the bear coming out of hibernation and shaking off its winter muteness, these poems awaken in all of us the mystery and wilderness of language. This book is for every woman who traverses the outdoors and wants her voice to be heard.
— Kate Kingston
Description
Red Voice
by Nancy Takacs
$14.99, paper
Nancy Takacs is the 2016 winner of the Juniper Prize for poetry, her collection The Worrier to be published by the University of Massachusetts Press in 2017. She has two other books of poems, including Blue Patina recently published by Blue Begonia Press; and three chapbooks. A former wilderness studies instructor and creative writing professor at Utah State University Eastern, she is the recipient of the 2013 Sherwin W. Howard Poetry Award from Weber: a Journal of the Contemporary West, the Kay Saunders New Poet Prize from the WFOP, several writing awards from the Utah Arts Council, and the Nation/Discovery Award. She has held two writing residencies from the Ucross Foundation. Her book The Worrier was a finalist for the National Poetry Series in 2015. She lives in Wellington, Utah, and Bayfield, Wisconsin.
Rating: ***** [5 of 5 Stars]
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