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Strange Land
Todd Hearon
$14.95
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Other Formats
Strange Land (E Book)
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Paper
0-8093-2966-2
978-0-8093-2966-3
88 pages, 6 x 9
4/8/2010
Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Series
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About the Book

Todd Hearon’s haunting debut collection chronicles the twin paths of isolation and desire in the search for meaning and union with others. On his pilgrimage through the lost worlds of earth and the soul, the speaker encounters drought in both the literal and spiritual sense as he confronts desolate landscapes, from the brown remnants of ruined cities, to the depths of the human heart and man’s capacity for utter destruction. Yet even though he frequently encounters darkness, he never ceases to seek beauty. He is a man who wears many faces, from Adam, staring down a bleak future bereft of Paradise, to the doomed poet Shelley, drowned off the coast of Italy. He speaks as a man adrift in his own life, seeking an answer to his emptiness, an estranged traveler through memory and longing. Lyrical and intense, Strange Land is a quest for understanding and human connection.

 

 

Strange Land 

It goes without saying

a word:  the world under cover

of midnight snow, what we have known

 

of pageantry and lilac, leaf and song

subsumed in starless silence.

Waking at dawn into the tremulous blue

 

of the room, as in earth’s afterglow,

we lie, lidless, listening, as crows

call out the ear’s horizons.

 

What year is it?  Into what country were we born

and now must make our way?  Outside the pane

the stillness feels ancestral but the ghosts

 

not yours, not mine.  My émigré,

we are cut off.  An ocean to the east

churns in chiaroscuro while unseen

 

ranges to the south deflect our passage,

what passage might have been.

This country seems the passing of a dream

 

to a moonscape’s still immitigable white,

a land’s amnesia where against the sky

three needling black birds fly

 

and slip like an ellipsis out of sight.

 

 

 

 


Authors/Editors

Todd Hearon is a poet, playwright, and fiction writer.  His poems, translations, and reviews have appeared in The Southern Review, The New Republic, Harvard Review, Partisan Review, AGNI, Literary Imagination, Ploughshares, Poetry, Poetry London, and Slate.  He has been the recipient of numerous awards, including a 2007 PEN New England “Discovery” Award; the 2007 Friends of Literature Prize from Poetry magazine; a Dobie Paisano writing fellowship from the University of Texas at Austin; and a Paul Green Playwrights Prize.


Reviews

“Todd Hearon’s engaging, inventive language penetrates to what he calls ‘the dark of your memory,’ a region where dreamlife and language overlap, where occulted feelings find the chords and discords of speech. . . . This is a first book of rare mastery.” —Robert Pinsky, former U.S. Poet Laureate


“At once inventive and elegant, hungering and assured, immediate and literary, visceral and visionary, the poems of Strange Land range broadly across the idiomatic and the oracular with a lyric economy that is as deftly accomplished as it is exhilarating. Strange Land is an exceptional first book, ambitious and necessary.”—Daniel Tobin, author of Second Things 


“These are beautiful uncompromising poems.”—David Ferry, author of Of No Country I Know: New and Selected Poems and Translations 

“‘My mind was a voyage hungering to happen,’ writes Todd Hearon in Strange Land,  a book that confronts the conundrum of human ambition, both public and private,  and its translating effects—the translation of ambition into hubris, of the ‘memory  of our innocence’ into ‘the hell we made of earth...[the] hell we made of each other.’  Hearon’s particular achievement is to have translated this heritage of human failings into something akin to grace, a debut at once hushed and stirring.”

—Carl Phillips, author of Speak Low: Poems

 

Strange Land is heady fare, and hearty, too. Hearon is at once intellectual and passionate, a master of both the fish-eye lens and the zoom, equally at home in longer sequences  and in epigrams. His formal mind is always in the service of what I can only call a vatic spirit, and his poems are (as poems should be) both aesthetic islands and maps of the mainland where we live. They are psalms (and salaams) for our world. In the fleece of these poems (to paraphrase one of them) the beast to bear us onward comes.”

—Geoffrey Brock, author of Weighing Light: Poems


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