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Extra Hidden Life, among the Days

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Brenda Hillman begins her new book in a place of mourning and listening that is deeply transformative. By turns plain and transcendent, these poems meditate on trees, bacteria, wasps, buildings, roots, and stars, ending with twinned elegies and poems of praise that open into spaces that are both magical and archetypal for human imagination: forests and seashores. As always, Hillman's vision is entirely original, her forms inventive and playful. At times the language turns feral as the poet feels her way toward other consciousnesses, into planetary time. This is poetry as a discipline of love and service to the world, whose lines shepherd us through grief and into an ethics of active resistance. Hillman's prior books include Practical Water and Seasonal Works with Letters on Fire, which received the Griffin Prize for Poetry. Extra Hidden Life, Among the Days is a visionary and critically important work for our time. A free reader's companion is available online at http://brendahillman.site.wesleyan.edu.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 18, 2017
      Hillman, winner of the 2014 Griffin Poetry Prize for Seasonal Works with Letters on Fire, continues her sustained attention to the natural elements in her 10th and most lavish collection. Having written four previous books each addressing one of the four traditional elements of nature, here she considers wood as a fifth element, making her hieroglyphic way through “forests of grief” as might one of the book’s beloved beetles, “pressing/ their whole jeweled bodies/ in the beauty of the bark.” Neither simply empirical nor transcendental, Hillman’s poetry takes what she calls “woodmind”—a sort of deep attention to natural processes—and applies it to notions of human action, recollection, imagination, and craft. The book includes gorgeous long-form elegies, poems of witness and social activism, and odes to the national forest and seashore. Hillman’s work will find a ready audience in poets of her own generation, as well as those younger poets following in her footsteps, in whose hands the category of “ecopoetry” has exploded, sporelike, into countless unnamed species. But this book could find a larger readership, as well: “You who don’t understand poetry/ Of course you do/ Stand in the shadows in a dream/ Write from where you are/ Write what you want to read.” Hillman’s urgent “ambulance of art” is bound to move readers to grief, outrage, and wonder. Agency: Blue Flower Arts.

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2018

      It's hard to sum up the grand sweep of this latest from Hillman (Practical Water), though her deconstruction of Robert Frost's lovely woods helps: "they are also oblique, obscure, magical, owned for profit, full of fragile unnamed species, scarce on time, time that barely exists though people base their lives on imagining it does." Thematically significant here, time dominates, as does the looming, viscerally rendered, and gorgeously obdurate natural world, both stretching out "as if/ humans were extra/ or already gone." If a cello resounds, lovers part, a hawk chatters with Amiri Baraka, and a leaf is plucked at Hegel's grave, the human gets swallowed, is indeed reflected in and defined by, barking seal pups and "drought-struggling laurel." Beyond that, "the visible is thick but the invisible is thicker," as there are answers none of us can give. VERDICT For all smart poetry readers.

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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