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lore [electronic resource] /Davis McCombs.

By: McCombs, Davis, 1969- [author.].
Contributor(s): Project Muse.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Agha Shahid Ali Prize in Poetry.Publisher: Salt Lake City : University of Utah Press, [2016] 2015)Description: 1 online resource (pages cm.).Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781607814825; 160781482X.Uniform titles: Poems. Selections Subject(s): POETRY / GeneralGenre/Form: Electronic books. DDC classification: 811/.54 Online resources: Full text available:
Partial contents:
First hard freeze -- A family story -- Wind in the Ozarks -- Dumpster honey? -- In his own country -- Freshwater drum -- Gray fox, a resolution of sorrow -- The Widder Mercer -- Of thorns --Trundle.
Summary: "Drawn from the rich folk traditions of his native Mammoth Cave region in Kentucky as well as the folklore of his adopted Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, the poems in Davis McCombs's third collection exist along the fraught lines where nature and agriculture collide or in those charged moments where modernity intrudes on an archaic world. These poems celebrate out-of-the-way places, the lore of plants, wild animals and their unknowable lives, and nearly forgotten ways of being and talking and doing. Rendered in a language of great lexical juxtapositions, here are days of soil and labor, nights lit only by firelight, and the beings, possibly not of this world, lured like moths to its flames. McCombs, always a poet of place and of rootedness, writes poems teetering between two locales, one familiar but achingly distant, one bewildering but alluringly present"-- Provided by publisher.
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First hard freeze -- A family story -- Wind in the Ozarks -- Dumpster honey? -- In his own country -- Freshwater drum -- Gray fox, a resolution of sorrow -- The Widder Mercer -- Of thorns --Trundle.

"Drawn from the rich folk traditions of his native Mammoth Cave region in Kentucky as well as the folklore of his adopted Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, the poems in Davis McCombs's third collection exist along the fraught lines where nature and agriculture collide or in those charged moments where modernity intrudes on an archaic world. These poems celebrate out-of-the-way places, the lore of plants, wild animals and their unknowable lives, and nearly forgotten ways of being and talking and doing. Rendered in a language of great lexical juxtapositions, here are days of soil and labor, nights lit only by firelight, and the beings, possibly not of this world, lured like moths to its flames. McCombs, always a poet of place and of rootedness, writes poems teetering between two locales, one familiar but achingly distant, one bewildering but alluringly present"-- Provided by publisher.

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