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Genre/Form: | Poetry |
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Additional Physical Format: | ebook version : |
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
John Foy |
ISBN: | 9781938769757 1938769759 |
OCLC Number: | 1181842224 |
Awards: | Winner of the 2020 Donald Justice Poetry Prize. |
Description: | viii, 85 pages ; 23 cm |
Contents: | Machine generated contents note: One. The Payment Plan -- Alan Kurdi -- Report Card -- Gollum -- Making War -- Into the Mountains -- Under Fire -- Cordite -- Clip -- Concussion Grenades -- Two. Prayer -- Cup -- One Hundred Pounds of Myrrh -- Contemplative -- Coyotes -- The Veery -- Wheelbarrow -- Leaving Sao Paulo -- Out of Body -- Night Riff -- Three. Funeral -- The Stinker -- It Is What It Is -- The Haunted Mansion -- The Partridge Family -- Headless Barbie Commission -- Boxer Shorts -- It's Not OK -- Going Mad -- Unlocking the Incredible Power of Small Stones -- Four. The Museum of Sex -- Five. The Television Set -- Long Live Rock -- The Bank -- Crane -- Blizzard -- Route 17 -- Cross and Sphere -- Bile -- Cost -- I Entertained a Thought. |
Responsibility: | John Foy. |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
"Foy writes about this world, this moment we're living in, but with a firm footing in the past and a powerful command of traditional forms which he bends and remakes to his own uses. No One Leaves The World Unhurt offers an open-eyed view of life, of what it is, of what it can be. . ." * Cleveland Review of Books * "Taking aggressive advantage of the imaginative freedom that poetry offers, Foy breaks into some frightening places here, including the brutality of war, the terrors of the future, his own dead body, and the 'crack house of [his] mind.' This edginess is skillfully balanced by Foy's formalist aptitudes, with inventive rhyming and sonnet skills on inconspicuous display. Still, the brash energy of the poems prevails. If some of them could drive themselves down Main Street, they would turn a lot of heads." -- Billy Collins, author of The Rain in Portugal "This accomplished and lively collection trains anthropological high-beams on contemporary America's frequently absurd patterns of thought and behavior. Foy's poems are by turns witty and affecting: gravity is leavened by playfulness; humorous forays ride on serious undercurrents. Like Robert Frost, Foy can compose traditionally formal poems without losing or even fraying natural thought threads. He also deftly incorporates the lexicon of economics into his meditations on grief, sex, Barbie dolls and Atlas 'shouldering the heavens like a man / with a second mortgage and child support to pay.' At last, here is a voice that tells the truth in such a way that we want to keep on listening." -- J. Allyn Rosser, author of Mimi's Trapeze "I find two things conspicuously missing in contemporary poetry. One is the quality that Keats called 'negative capability,' projecting the self into the minds and hearts of those who are different from the poet, perhaps even uncongenial to him. The other is the old-fashioned 'metaphysical' conceit, in which an everyday object becomes a controlling metaphor for the poem, and even the poet's choice of form becomes the vehicle of meaning. Take it from me; John Foy possesses both." -- R. S. Gwynn, author of No Word of Farewell Read more...

