I Wanted Everything |
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Author:
| Whittlesey, Elizabeth |
Foreword by:
| Donnelly, Timothy |
ISBN: | 978-1-938308-11-6 |
Publication Date: | Nov 2018 |
Publisher: | Antilever Press
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $16.95 |
Book Description:
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Poetry. Foreword by Timothy Donnelly. Sipping Diet Snapple discontentedly at a bistro, channeling Joseph Smith's visions, taking in the enormity of climate change, glimpsing her spirited alter ego Miss Muggins at the drugstore or the movies: Elizabeth Whittlesey's debut volume of poems is about the way we live now, amid the ironies, pleasures, and desolations of selves in the grip of natural and manufactured want. These are poems that speak, aloud and with improbable buoyancy, from out...
More DescriptionPoetry. Foreword by Timothy Donnelly. Sipping Diet Snapple discontentedly at a bistro, channeling Joseph Smith's visions, taking in the enormity of climate change, glimpsing her spirited alter ego Miss Muggins at the drugstore or the movies: Elizabeth Whittlesey's debut volume of poems is about the way we live now, amid the ironies, pleasures, and desolations of selves in the grip of natural and manufactured want. These are poems that speak, aloud and with improbable buoyancy, from out of the opposed demands of self-absorption and a wider social and ecological consciousness, and find a precarious but real equilibrium.
"It would be easy, accurate, and even comforting to describe I WANTED EVERYTHING as yet another book of poetry about desire. Easy because it's right there in the title...Comforting because to summarize this wild, capacious new thing as 'a book of poetry about desire' is to domesticate it, make it familiar...But something other than familiar lyric longing is at work in I WANTED EVERYTHING, something far more treacherous...Desire for Whittlesey presents itself not simply as the time-honored, almost quaint condition of human consciousness that, once upon a time, we learned to channel productively into exploration, architecture, and scientific advance, or else to direct with lyrical delicacy towards objects of hypothetical or naturally occurring beauty...That's not where we are anymore, if we really ever were. Where we are is 'a land where two double cheeseburgers cost less / than a single,' where 'advertising inserts are spilling / continually out of magazines'...situated instead among the fluorescent aisles of all-night drugstores...or in 'the dark cavern of Trump / Tower's underbelly.'...Years from now, when they ask, and they will, what it was like back then, meaning the present, I will be kind. I will hand them I WANTED EVERYTHING, and I'll say take this, all of you, and read."--From the foreword by Timothy Donnelly, winner of the Kingsley Tufts Award