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Details
Genre/Form: | Novels in verse Romans en vers |
---|---|
Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Elizabeth Robinson |
ISBN: | 9781890650513 189065051X |
OCLC Number: | 756837694 |
Notes: | Poems. |
Description: | 73 pages : portrait ; 23 cm |
Contents: | The moonstone -- The woman in white -- Romance : after Eve's ransom. |
Other Titles: | Homage to Wilkie Collins and George Gissing |
Responsibility: | Elizabeth Robinson. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
"Elizabeth Robinson's new and original collection recasts three mysterious novels into poetic prose fragments each of which underscores questions also raised in the novels: what is to be believed, which clues should be followed, which layer of meaning represents any form of truth... this original and intriguing exploration also urges reading itself as a way to grasp our lives." --Martha Ronk, author, Vertigo "Part lyrical investigation, part investigative evocation, always insightful and original, Elizabeth Robinson's Three Novels is a poetic journey into the prose delectations of the ever-wonderful Wilkie Collins and George Gissing. Just as Susan Howe's exploration of Emily Dickinson offered readers a fresh path into her works and days, so now has Robinson traveled back into nineteenth-century England to rediscover masterpieces by two of its most quirky, unconventional giants. A real jewel, Three Novels recalls the ineffable one that Wilkie Collins conjured in The Moonstone, the mystery that T. S. Eliot referred to as 'the first...and the best of the modern English detective novels.' And Robinson's achievement of bringing fresh life to these classics, already bursting with life themselves, is a feat that deserves our gratitude and admiration." --Bradford Morrow, author, The Diviner's Tale "... the bravery in [ Apprehend ] ...and its disobedience is everwhere conditioned by a powerful subversion of our habits of mind, our expectations as readers, our lazy desire to be comforted by the familiar. These poems brilliantly reinvent the moral reckonings common to all fable. Elizabeth Robinson reminds us to wonder and, in wondering, to experience wonder as the fault line between how the world is and what we apprehend in and of it." --Ann Lauterbach "The poems in Apprehend (Fence Modern Poets Award 2002) mark a new chapter in the work of Elizabeth Robinson, who over the last few years has quietly, but unmistakably, emerged as the one of the finest poets of her generation. Apprehend amplifies the body of her previous work, with its focus on the crisis of spiritual desire, examining the insurgence, regulation, and ambiguity of eros through a brilliant re-reading of classic fairy tales." --Patrick Pritchett, Jacket 23 "We perceive more than words allow us to say. The metaphoric relations in Robinson's poetry, however, point out possible orders of attention that may help us reflect on our relationship to otherness--an otherness that resides within." --Dale Smith on "Inaudible Trumpeters" Read more...

