Songs of Unreason

Songs of Unreason
Authors
Harrison, Jim
Publisher
Copper Canyon Press
Tags
poetry
ISBN
9781619320383
Date
2011-10-11T00:00:00+00:00
Size
1.56 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 27 times

1 Poetry Foundation Bestseller

Michigan Notable Book

"A beautifully mysterious inquiry... Here Harrison--forthright, testy, funny, and profoundly discerning--a gruff romantic and a sage realist, tells tales about himself, from his dangerous obsession with Federico Garcia Lorca to how he touched a bear's head, reflects on his dance with the trickster age, and shares magnetizing visions of dogs, horses, birds, and rivers. Oscillating between drenching experience and intellectual musings, Harrison celebrates movement as the pulse of life, and art, which 'scrubs the soul fresh.'" --"Booklist"

"Harrison has written a nearly pitch-perfect book of poems, shining with the elemental force of Neruda's "Odes" or Matisse's paper cutouts....In "Songs of Unreason, ," his finest book of verse, Harrison has stripped his voice to the bare essentials--to what must be said, and only what must be said." --"The Wichita Eagle"

""Songs of Unreason, " Harrison's latest collection of poetry, is a wonderful defense of the possibilities of living.... His are hard won lines, but never bitter, just broken in and thankful for the chance to have seen it all." --"The Industrial Worker Book Review"

"Unlike many contemporary poets, Harrison is philosophical, but his philosophy is nature-based and idiosyncratic: 'Much that you see/ isn't with your eyes./ Throughout the body are eyes.'... As in all good poetry, Harrison's lines linger to be ruminated upon a third or fourth time, with each new reading revealing more substance and raising more questions." --"Library Journal"

"It wouldn't be a Harrison collection without the poet, novelist, and food critic's reverence for rivers, dogs, and women...his poems stun us simply, with the richness of the clarity, detail, and the immediacy of Harrison's voice." --"Publishers Weekly"

Jim Harrison's compelling and provocative "Songs of Unreason" explores what it means to inhabit the world in atavistic, primitive, and totemistic ways. "This can be disturbing to the learned," Harrison admits. Using interconnected suites, brief lyrics, and rollicking narratives, Harrison's passions and concerns--creeks, thickets, time's effervescence, familial love--emerge by turns painful and celebratory, localized and exiled.