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Dogged
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Dogged
Current price: $18.95

Barnes and Noble
Dogged
Current price: $18.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
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Located somewhere between fiction and reality, the animals of
Dogged
exist as both “creatures children see in their fevers” and “your one / good dream / in the night.” Inhabiting a space apart from time and narrative, the space of the ever-elusive now, these haunting poems probe animal consciousness and desire, as “howls float / like crocuses / violet / and half open / to the unknown.”
Looking to a wide range of high and low visual media, from Steven Spielberg’s
Jaws
and Animal Planet’s
Fatal Attractions
to Peter Paul Rubens’s painting of Hercules’s dog discovering Tyrian purple, Stacy Gnall ponders human-animal connections and divisions, exploring those moments when human voices blend with “silent” beasts to exceed the limits of language. In
, animals emerge as the highest aspiration of poetry.
Around the bend it was reckoned
we would never grow old
because there were no words for it.
I placed my arms soft
around the neck of a fawn
and she felt no alarm. Speech
is where we went wrong.
(
From “The Wood in Which Things Have No Name”)
Dogged
exist as both “creatures children see in their fevers” and “your one / good dream / in the night.” Inhabiting a space apart from time and narrative, the space of the ever-elusive now, these haunting poems probe animal consciousness and desire, as “howls float / like crocuses / violet / and half open / to the unknown.”
Looking to a wide range of high and low visual media, from Steven Spielberg’s
Jaws
and Animal Planet’s
Fatal Attractions
to Peter Paul Rubens’s painting of Hercules’s dog discovering Tyrian purple, Stacy Gnall ponders human-animal connections and divisions, exploring those moments when human voices blend with “silent” beasts to exceed the limits of language. In
, animals emerge as the highest aspiration of poetry.
Around the bend it was reckoned
we would never grow old
because there were no words for it.
I placed my arms soft
around the neck of a fawn
and she felt no alarm. Speech
is where we went wrong.
(
From “The Wood in Which Things Have No Name”)
Located somewhere between fiction and reality, the animals of
Dogged
exist as both “creatures children see in their fevers” and “your one / good dream / in the night.” Inhabiting a space apart from time and narrative, the space of the ever-elusive now, these haunting poems probe animal consciousness and desire, as “howls float / like crocuses / violet / and half open / to the unknown.”
Looking to a wide range of high and low visual media, from Steven Spielberg’s
Jaws
and Animal Planet’s
Fatal Attractions
to Peter Paul Rubens’s painting of Hercules’s dog discovering Tyrian purple, Stacy Gnall ponders human-animal connections and divisions, exploring those moments when human voices blend with “silent” beasts to exceed the limits of language. In
, animals emerge as the highest aspiration of poetry.
Around the bend it was reckoned
we would never grow old
because there were no words for it.
I placed my arms soft
around the neck of a fawn
and she felt no alarm. Speech
is where we went wrong.
(
From “The Wood in Which Things Have No Name”)
Dogged
exist as both “creatures children see in their fevers” and “your one / good dream / in the night.” Inhabiting a space apart from time and narrative, the space of the ever-elusive now, these haunting poems probe animal consciousness and desire, as “howls float / like crocuses / violet / and half open / to the unknown.”
Looking to a wide range of high and low visual media, from Steven Spielberg’s
Jaws
and Animal Planet’s
Fatal Attractions
to Peter Paul Rubens’s painting of Hercules’s dog discovering Tyrian purple, Stacy Gnall ponders human-animal connections and divisions, exploring those moments when human voices blend with “silent” beasts to exceed the limits of language. In
, animals emerge as the highest aspiration of poetry.
Around the bend it was reckoned
we would never grow old
because there were no words for it.
I placed my arms soft
around the neck of a fawn
and she felt no alarm. Speech
is where we went wrong.
(
From “The Wood in Which Things Have No Name”)
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