Begleiten Sie uns auf eine literarische Weltreise!
Buch zum Bücherregal hinzufügen
Grey
Einen neuen Kommentar schreiben Default profile 50px
Grey
Jetzt das ganze Buch im Abo oder die ersten Seiten gratis lesen!
All characters reduced
Scanning Past Horizons - cover

Scanning Past Horizons

Randy White

Verlag: Poets Choice

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Beschreibung

With a taste of nostalgia, “Scanning Past Horizons: Poetry in Time,” by Randy Lee White delves into the psyche of struggling Americans now and in the past. This thought-provoking and often heart-wrenching collection captures time in a poetic multifaceted view. With poems such as the “Morning Rush,” and “Broad and Main,” the audience feels the frenzy of rush hour and the workweek. They will plunge into a digital world that is instantaneous and permanent with such poems as: “Weirdest Thing,” “Microscopes,” and “The Workhorse” before reflecting backwards.
Explore a multifaceted view on poetic time: both in the present and in the past. Embrace key moments that have shaped America and the world. Such poems as “The 1903 Flyer,” “Bonus. 1932,” “Bone Dry, 1935,” “Letter for Home, June 1944,” and “Moonwalk, 1969,” pull readers back in time. These events give a glimpse of a past not so clean, not so righteous—yet, promising. Many of these sonnets will tug at the audience’s hearts with light-hearted comedy and realistic drama to create a sense of nostalgic wonder.
At the very heart of this collection is a poem about time itself, titled, “Now & Then.”  It illuminates humanity’s struggle to preserve time. In a blink of an eye or the scroll of the platen roller on a typewriter time passes regardless of our feeble attempts to control it.  
The essence of this collection is time. Time to think; time to ponder. This gathering of poems clearly reflect that facet first shown in the introduction poem. And that same theme vibrates throughout the collection all the way to the last poem. Are we all searching for something to define us? Do we unknowingly judge others? Do we spit on “truth’s granite façade,” as the old man said. Perhaps his sarcastic attitude can help us see our ignorance in judging others without a better understanding of ourselves. This multifaced collection fills the reader with a sense of purpose in that understanding.
In the end, “Scanning Past Horizons: Poetry in Time” is more than a poetic concept of time. It is about our humanity and how certain moments in time have affected us. Furthermore, this collection leaves readers pondering the question of whether we define the events that make history or do the events that make history define us forever? This multifaceted poetry collection will be a timeless glimpse into that abyss and have readers returning again and again.
Verfügbar seit: 05.06.2024.
Drucklänge: 56 Seiten.

Weitere Bücher, die Sie mögen werden

  • The Double - cover

    The Double

    Fyodor Dostoevsky

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    First published in 1846, The Double: A Petersburg Poem marks one of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s earliest and most daring explorations of the human psyche. Often overshadowed by his later masterpieces, The Double is nevertheless a crucial work in Dostoevsky’s literary evolution — a precursor to the psychological complexity and existential themes that would define Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, and Notes from Underground. 
    The novella tells the story of Yakov Petrovich Golyadkin, a low-ranking civil servant whose already fragile identity begins to unravel when he encounters his exact double — a man who is identical in appearance but possesses all the social charm and confidence Golyadkin lacks. What follows is a haunting descent into paranoia, self-alienation, and mental disintegration, all set against the bureaucratic backdrop of 19th-century St. Petersburg.
    Zum Buch
  • Expressway - cover

    Expressway

    Sina Queyras

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for Poetry
       
    This poem resembles urban sprawl. This poem resembles the freedom to charge a fee. The fee occurs in the gaps. It is an event. It is not without precedent. It is a moment in which you pay money. It is a tribute to freedom of choice.
       
    Reality is a parking lot in Qatar. Reality is an airstrip in Malawi.
       
    Meanwhile the expressway encloses, the expressway round and around the perimeters like wagon trains circling the bonfire, all of them, guns pointed, Busby Berkeley in the night sky.
       
    Echoing the pastoral and elegiac modes of the Romantic poets, whose reverence for nature never prevented them from addressing it with all the ideas and sensibilities their times allowed, Sina Queyras's stunning collection explores the infrastructures and means of modern mobility. Addressing the human project not so much as something imposed on nature but as an increasingly disturbing activity within it, Expressway exposes the paradox of modern mobility: the more roads and connections we build, the more separate we feel. 'Cleanse the doors of perception,' Blake urged, and with that in mind, Queyras has written a bravely lyrical critique of our ethical and ecological imprint, a legacy easily blamed on corporations and commerce, but one we've allowed, through our tacit acquiescence, to overwhelm us. Every brush stroke, every bolt and nut, every form and curve in our networks of oil and rubber, every thought and its material outcome – each decision can make or unmake us.
       
    'The works in Expressway are all so tightly wound, hyper-distilled and stressed ... This is poetry for the apocalypse.'
       
    —Broken Pencil
       
    'As a poet, Queyras is secretly romantic, writing with lyricism and a voice that's unafraid of sentiment or emotion ... Queyras' words spark like pickaxes on old asphalt.'
       
    — Eye Weekly
       
    'Queyras show[s] what poetry can do when it simultaneously maps roadways of transportation and lines of human thought.'
       
    —Spacing
       
    'Eclectic engagements characterize Queyras’s work, but any suggestion of characterization of her work immediately brings a morphing to something new, intelligent, and provocative ... Sina Queyras is a poet to read and reckon with.'
       
    —Lambda Literary Review
    Zum Buch
  • Bad Weather Mammals - Poems - cover

    Bad Weather Mammals - Poems

    Ashley-Elizabeth Best

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “The sick should be good. / It is a kind of undoing,” Ashley-Elizabeth Best writes in her second collection. Bad Weather Mammals navigates the devastations and joys of living in a disabled and traumatized body. By taking a backward glance, she traces how growing up under the maladaptive bureaucracy of social services with a single disabled mother and five younger siblings led her to a precarious future in which she is also disabled and living on social assistance. In poems that explore a variety of formal constraints, such as the suite “ODSP 1, 2, & 3,” which infuses government forms with lyric poetry, she suggests all the ways the medical and bureaucratic systems can dehumanize and traumatize our most vulnerable citizens. By digging deep into her own experiences, Best has archived the ways we fail each other in our most desperate times — while at the same time outlining how we can show up to revel in disabled joy and community. Bad Weather Mammals disassembles dominant narratives about how disabled individuals should be and reconceptualizes the embodied experiences that recenter us in our own narrative.
    Zum Buch
  • Cratchit Christmas A (Dramatized) - cover

    Cratchit Christmas A (Dramatized)

    Jason Markiewitz

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Markiewitz Audioworks is proud to present "A Cratchit Christmas," a full cast audio dramatization based upon the 1843 story "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens.  In this original script, an international cast of voice actors, a Victorian soundscape and sound effects, and a beautiful Christmassy score, serve to bring you a rendition of this tale you've never heard before! 
    The popularity of "A Christmas Carol" has induced more than 200 movies and scores of other productions across the media spectrum.  In this full-cast audio drama, we take the framework from the original story and follow the Cratchits through the same timeframe where Scrooge is changed by the spirits.  With a careful and intentional blending of the original story with new dialogue the listeners will be given a fresh look at the Cratchit family during a difficult, but hopeful Christmas season.   
    Cast: 
    Marc Zakian as Bob Cratchit 
    Rachel Esposti as Emily Cratchit 
    Marc Biagi as Ebenezer Scrooge 
    Rigby Dehnart as Tiny Tim 
    Gabi King as Martha Cratchit 
    David Hilder as Peter Cratchit 
    Bethany Baldwin as Belinda Cratchit 
    Rainey Mangan as Lucy Cratchit 
    Rose Beasley as Matthew Cratchit 
    Brian Jeffords as the Poulterer 
    Ian Lahlum as the Pastor 
    Jonathan Cooke as the Gentlemen 
    Townspeople: 
    Bethany Baldwin, Rachel Esposti, Sharon Grunwald, David Hilder, & Jason Markiewitz 
    Carolers: 
    Bethany Baldwin, Alicia Hansen, David Hilder, Gabi King, Tanya Rich, & Dominic Treis 
    Crew: 
    Cover Artist: Jon Markiewitz 
    Composer: Ross Bernhardt 
    Additional Music: Douglas Grunwald 
    Script Consultant: Alicia Hansen 
    Sound Design Consultant: Jonathan Cooke 
    Asst. Casting Director: Rachel Pulliam 
    Director/Producer/Sound Design/Script: Jason Markiewitz 
    A Cratchit Christmas is a Markiewitz Audioworks Production. 
    (C) 2024 Jason Markiewitz (P) 2024 Markiewitz Audioworks 
    (C) 2024 Jason Markiewitz (P) 2024 Markiewitz Audioworks
    Zum Buch
  • Lady Dealer (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    Lady Dealer (NHB Modern Plays)

    Martha Watson Allpress

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    For Charly, every day is the same. Things used to be different, when there was Clo, but now there isn't Clo, and Charly doesn't want to dwell on that. She just wants to chug coffee, blast Beastie Boys and deal drugs. Simple.
    But when Charly suffers a power cut, she's forced back into the real world of knock-off Morrisseys, disapproving mothers and, ultimately, a world she has to navigate alone.
    Lady Dealer is a mile-a-minute, one-person poem play by Martha Watson Allpress about forgiveness, the exhaustion of trying, and mistaking self-destruction for self-preservation.
    It premiered in Paines Plough's Roundabout during the 2023 Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
    Zum Buch
  • two Palestinians go dogging (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

    two Palestinians go dogging (NHB...

    Sami Ibrahim

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The year is 2043, and Reem and her husband Sayeed are going to share a 'Serious Play about Palestine'. Things are tense. People are on the edge. The Fifth Intifada is right around the corner. But on a contested piece of land near their village of Beit al-Qadir, Reem and Sayeed are about to go dogging. Don't worry, you're allowed to laugh.
    Sami Ibrahim's play two Palestinians go dogging uses the lens of humour to explore how the everyday becomes political and the political becomes everyday in a conflict zone.
    The play won the Theatre Uncut Political Playwriting Award in 2019 and was premiered in May 2022 at the Royal Court Jerwood Theatre Upstairs, London, directed by Omar Elerian.
    Zum Buch