University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001 eISBN: 978-0-8229-7997-5 | Paper: 978-0-8229-5768-3 Library of Congress Classification PS3613.A2735Z66 2002 Dewey Decimal Classification 811.6
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Joanie Mackowski’s debut collection of poetry is meditative, vivid, sometimes weird. Turning an idiosyncratic eye to the inhabitants of zoos and fish tanks, cafes and cemeteries, she illuminates details that make the familiar seem strange. An egret stands "still as a glass of milk"; iceberg lettuce is a "vegetable leviathan" that "extends beneath the dinner table / an unseen, monstrous green"; a bald eagle may "love a jet?— / or worship them all, or mock them, rigid / freaks that never linger."
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Joanie Mackowski is assistant professor of English at Cornell University and author of the poetry collection The Zoo. Her awards include the Emily Dickinson Prize from the Poetry Society of America, the Associated Writing Programs Award in Poetry, the Kate Tufts Discovery Prize, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Grant, and a Wallace Stegner Fellowship. Mackowski's poems have appeared in The Best American Poetry 2007 and 2009, the Yale Review, Poetry, the American Scholar, New England Review, Raritan, Southwest Review, the Kenyon Review, and other journals.
REVIEWS
“ . . . her first collection . . . is a high-spirited survey of our peculiar species, often with parallel glances at other animals . . . Mackowski’s wit stands her in good stead . . . She has talent to burn . . .” --Poetry Magazine
“. . . gaze is superseded by sharp observation that yields vivid visual imagery and invites immersion. . . . Mackowski’s rhymes, myriad and ingenious, are one of the most impressive features of The Zoo.” --The Yale Review
“A virtuoso performance. . . .Contains many delightful surprises and not a few ideas worth considering.”
—Antioch Review
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Ants
The Cleaning
Self-Portrait, Double Exposed
The Beam
Electric Storm on Brayton Point
Waiting
Ephemerals and Particulars
By Tomales Bay
Lullaby
The Zoo
List
Zeros, Veers,
View from the Bluff
The Oracle
The Princess and the Sky Fish
Little Song
Seattle to Boston
What a Bird Said
View from the Porch
Arvida Community, Florida
Lunch by the Construction Site and After
Falling Backward
Blues and Reds
Walking
Unusual Cloud Formations
A Ferry Crossing
The Hat of Miss Magee
Wild
San Francisco Bay Landscape
Song for Dancing
Matter and Rapture
Iceberg Lettuce
Stargazing
The Cemetery on the Commons
Vanishing Points
Acknowledgments
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Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001 eISBN: 978-0-8229-7997-5 Paper: 978-0-8229-5768-3
Joanie Mackowski’s debut collection of poetry is meditative, vivid, sometimes weird. Turning an idiosyncratic eye to the inhabitants of zoos and fish tanks, cafes and cemeteries, she illuminates details that make the familiar seem strange. An egret stands "still as a glass of milk"; iceberg lettuce is a "vegetable leviathan" that "extends beneath the dinner table / an unseen, monstrous green"; a bald eagle may "love a jet?— / or worship them all, or mock them, rigid / freaks that never linger."
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Joanie Mackowski is assistant professor of English at Cornell University and author of the poetry collection The Zoo. Her awards include the Emily Dickinson Prize from the Poetry Society of America, the Associated Writing Programs Award in Poetry, the Kate Tufts Discovery Prize, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Grant, and a Wallace Stegner Fellowship. Mackowski's poems have appeared in The Best American Poetry 2007 and 2009, the Yale Review, Poetry, the American Scholar, New England Review, Raritan, Southwest Review, the Kenyon Review, and other journals.
REVIEWS
“ . . . her first collection . . . is a high-spirited survey of our peculiar species, often with parallel glances at other animals . . . Mackowski’s wit stands her in good stead . . . She has talent to burn . . .” --Poetry Magazine
“. . . gaze is superseded by sharp observation that yields vivid visual imagery and invites immersion. . . . Mackowski’s rhymes, myriad and ingenious, are one of the most impressive features of The Zoo.” --The Yale Review
“A virtuoso performance. . . .Contains many delightful surprises and not a few ideas worth considering.”
—Antioch Review
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Ants
The Cleaning
Self-Portrait, Double Exposed
The Beam
Electric Storm on Brayton Point
Waiting
Ephemerals and Particulars
By Tomales Bay
Lullaby
The Zoo
List
Zeros, Veers,
View from the Bluff
The Oracle
The Princess and the Sky Fish
Little Song
Seattle to Boston
What a Bird Said
View from the Porch
Arvida Community, Florida
Lunch by the Construction Site and After
Falling Backward
Blues and Reds
Walking
Unusual Cloud Formations
A Ferry Crossing
The Hat of Miss Magee
Wild
San Francisco Bay Landscape
Song for Dancing
Matter and Rapture
Iceberg Lettuce
Stargazing
The Cemetery on the Commons
Vanishing Points
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