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Anne & Alpheus, 1842–1882
University of Arkansas Press, 1996 eISBN: 978-1-61075-020-2 | Paper: 978-1-55728-416-7 Library of Congress Classification PS3569.U728A56 1996 Dewey Decimal Classification 811.54
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Chosen by Rachel Hadas as the winner of the Arkansas Poetry Award, Anne & Alpheus: 1842–1882 is a compelling duet of monologues between a frontier man and woman surviving the hardships and recording the small triumphs of life in rural nineteenth-century Kentucky. Ambitious in breadth and scope, these poems chart the loves and losses of early marriage, the terrors of civilian life during the Civil War, and the universal sorrows of aging, loneliness, and death. Through the distinct voices of Anne and Alpheus Waters, Joe Survant has fashioned a collection with all the sweep of a novel, all the dramatic intensity, poem by poem, of short fiction, and all the earthy, human lyricism of the dramatic monologue. These poems take us into the tobacco sheds, put us behind the plow, let us smell the soil, and See other books on: 1842 - 1882 | Farm life | Kentucky | Married people | Poetry See other titles from University of Arkansas Press |
Nearby on shelf for American literature / Individual authors / 1961-2000:
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