Northwestern University Press, 2002 Paper: 978-0-8101-5123-9 | Cloth: 978-0-8101-5122-2 Library of Congress Classification PS3570.U627E97 2002 Dewey Decimal Classification 811.54
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Everything this poet touches is volatile—the poet himself, the people and world around him, ideas and mythologies, the ghosts of memory and the dream of possible futures, all seem to burst into fragments. Mark Turcotte uses poetry to gather up the pieces—the shards of joy and grief, peace and doubt, strength and temptation, questions and answers—as he tries to define and rediscover what is lost when everyday life becomes explosive.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
MARK TURCOTTE lived his early years on North Dakota's Turtle Mountain Reservation and grew up in and around Lansing, Michigan. He now lives and works in Fish Creek, Wisconsin. Turcotte was the recipient of the First Annual Gwendolyn Brooks Open-Mic Award. He was a Pushcart Prize nominee in 1998 and in 2000, and he received a Lannan Foundation Literary Completion Grant in 2001. His work has appeared in Prairie Schooner, Ploughshares, and Poetry, among other publications, and in 1998 he published a revised edition of his first book, The Feathered Heart (Michigan State University Press). A selection of his poems will soon appear in a bilingual French-English edition entitled La Chant de la Route (La Vague Verte, Paris).
REVIEWS
"Mark Turcotte's poetry feels like something brand new in Native American literature, like the first step of an original and aboriginal journey. There are no forced apologies or faux confessions here, and no desperate and nostalgic reaches into the past. Turcotte is very present in these powerful and playful poems." —Sherman Alexie
— -
"I find Mark Turcotte's work to be very harsh, but true. In an age where false sincerity is favored over art, Turcotte's work is a corrective. It is very strong and has won me as a fan." —Jim Harrison
— -
"Mark Turcotte's work is powered by anger, hilarity, and an earthy tenderness that grabs the heart and won't let go." —Louise Erdrich
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. The Back When Poems
Continue
Gravity
Visitation
Battlefield
Harvest
Away
Grow
Twist
Boom
Signal
Burn
Flood
Reflection
Motion
Call
Go
Draw
Contact
Near
Tell
Exit
Orbit
II. Road Noise
Election Day I
Road Noise I
Fists and Fingers Dream
Road Noise II
Election Day II
Road Noise III
Dust
Road Noise IV
The Waiting
Election Day III
Hands
III. Exploding Chippewas
No Pie
Meanwhile in America
Woman Calls Water
Now We Sleep
Mabel Never Tells White Men She Loves the Moon
Edgar Two Dogs and the Singing of the Razor Blades
My Blood is Better Than Your Blood
In the Dream-All-Night Laundromat
A Very Distant Drumming
Exploding Chippewas
Acknowledgments
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
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Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
Northwestern University Press, 2002 Paper: 978-0-8101-5123-9 Cloth: 978-0-8101-5122-2
Everything this poet touches is volatile—the poet himself, the people and world around him, ideas and mythologies, the ghosts of memory and the dream of possible futures, all seem to burst into fragments. Mark Turcotte uses poetry to gather up the pieces—the shards of joy and grief, peace and doubt, strength and temptation, questions and answers—as he tries to define and rediscover what is lost when everyday life becomes explosive.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
MARK TURCOTTE lived his early years on North Dakota's Turtle Mountain Reservation and grew up in and around Lansing, Michigan. He now lives and works in Fish Creek, Wisconsin. Turcotte was the recipient of the First Annual Gwendolyn Brooks Open-Mic Award. He was a Pushcart Prize nominee in 1998 and in 2000, and he received a Lannan Foundation Literary Completion Grant in 2001. His work has appeared in Prairie Schooner, Ploughshares, and Poetry, among other publications, and in 1998 he published a revised edition of his first book, The Feathered Heart (Michigan State University Press). A selection of his poems will soon appear in a bilingual French-English edition entitled La Chant de la Route (La Vague Verte, Paris).
REVIEWS
"Mark Turcotte's poetry feels like something brand new in Native American literature, like the first step of an original and aboriginal journey. There are no forced apologies or faux confessions here, and no desperate and nostalgic reaches into the past. Turcotte is very present in these powerful and playful poems." —Sherman Alexie
— -
"I find Mark Turcotte's work to be very harsh, but true. In an age where false sincerity is favored over art, Turcotte's work is a corrective. It is very strong and has won me as a fan." —Jim Harrison
— -
"Mark Turcotte's work is powered by anger, hilarity, and an earthy tenderness that grabs the heart and won't let go." —Louise Erdrich
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. The Back When Poems
Continue
Gravity
Visitation
Battlefield
Harvest
Away
Grow
Twist
Boom
Signal
Burn
Flood
Reflection
Motion
Call
Go
Draw
Contact
Near
Tell
Exit
Orbit
II. Road Noise
Election Day I
Road Noise I
Fists and Fingers Dream
Road Noise II
Election Day II
Road Noise III
Dust
Road Noise IV
The Waiting
Election Day III
Hands
III. Exploding Chippewas
No Pie
Meanwhile in America
Woman Calls Water
Now We Sleep
Mabel Never Tells White Men She Loves the Moon
Edgar Two Dogs and the Singing of the Razor Blades
My Blood is Better Than Your Blood
In the Dream-All-Night Laundromat
A Very Distant Drumming
Exploding Chippewas
Acknowledgments
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE