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Taiwan Travelogue by Yáng Shuāng-zǐ, translated by Lin King has won the 2024 National Book Award for Translated Literature!!! Buy now

Book Title

Love and I

Subtitle
Poems
Author 1
Fanny Howe
Poem Excerpt
Some who lack love keep traveling.
 
They sense that an airplane is a mystical vessel
That flies because it doesn’t know it’s on air.
 
They say goodbye to life and earth when boarding.
Strapped down
They must go on living because they have scores to settle.
 
And suddenly they want to talk to God.
—from Love and I
 
Body
Set in transit even as they investigate the transitory, the cinematic poems in Love and I move like a handheld camera through the eternal, the minds of passengers, and the landscapes of Ireland and America. From this slight remove, Fanny Howe explores the edge of “pure seeing” and the worldly griefs she encounters there, cast in an otherworldly light. These poems layer pasture and tarmac, the skies above where airline passengers are compressed with their thoughts, and the ground where miseries accumulate, alongside comedies, in the figures of children in a park.
 
Love can do little but walk with the person and suddenly vanish, and that recurrent abandonment makes it necessary for these poems to find a balance between seeing and believing. For Howe, that balance is found in the Word, spoken in language, in music, in and on the wind, as invisible and continuous lyric thinking heard by the thinker alone. These are poems animated by belief and unbelief. Love and I fulfills Howe's philosophy of Bewilderment.
 

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List Price
$16.00
ISBN
ISBN
978-1-64445-004-8
Format
Format
Paperback
Publication Date
Publication Date
Subject
Subject
Pages
Pages
96
Trim Size
Trim Size
5.5 x 8.25
Keynote
The newest collection from “one of America’s most dazzling poets” (O, The Oprah Magazine).

About the Author

Fanny  Howe
Credit: Lynn Christoffers
Fanny Howe is the author of more than thirty works of poetry and prose, including Love and IThe Needle's Eye, Come and See, and The Winter Sun. Her most recent poetry collection, Second Childhood, was a finalist for the National Book Award, and her fiction has been honored as a finalist for the Man Booker International Prize. She lives in New England.

http://www.fannyhowe.com/
More by author

Praise

  • “Love and I is a meander through a singular mind. . . .  Howe’s inquisitiveness, generosity, and care are easy to appreciate and impossible to resist.”Zyzzyva
     
  • “Readers ready to suspend expectations about what and how poems mean will delight in the transformations happening in these pages.”Publishers Weekly
     
  • “In nearly every poem, the poet delves deeply. Her questing invites us to read and reread. For all academic and larger public library collections.”Library Journal
     
  • “[Love and I is] Howe at her fierce best; and in the reading, you may be dazzled, like the first time you found poetry.”Washington Independent Review of Books
     
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