The poets guide to the birds
1st ed.
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Author
Publication
2009 - Anhinga Press, Tallahassee, Fla, Florida
Language
English
Word Count
54,000 words, Guess
Page Count
216 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archivepoetsguidetobird0000unse
- ISBN-101934695041
- ISBN-139781934695043
- Library of Congress Control Number2008931769
- OCLC Control Number301666042
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL37816252M
Classifications
- DDC811.5
- LCCPS595.B54 P64 2009
Description
"Bird watchers are taught to notice: how to distinguish one bird from another; male from female; how birds act and sound; where to look; what to look for. Poets do not come armed with such precise detail, and it could be said that they look at birds differently, that they "see" differently. Yet astute bird watchers will recognize their feathered friends in the pages of this collection, will see and hear familiar birds - but possibly they will see and hear them in new ways. Here, birds sound like your grandparents' porch swing, or banjos, or typewriters, or Caruso. They argue and yelp and ricochet. And their activities - well, they are described in so many inventive ways that readers will find themselves looking skyward to see if reality mirrors the poems." "The poets here often admit to how little they know, and then they realize how much they have learned by observing. Some stare unflinchingly at the birds, record simple behavior, take note of context and color and mood. For others, the birds are peripheral, touching down tangentially, then flying off, leaving insight in their wake. Some of these poets focus on specifics: this bird, this place, this time. They watch for habit and habitat, as well as deviation from the norm. Others veer toward the general: how birds figure in our lives, how they spark questions, call up earlier times or places, offer up meanings. Many address the activities of bird watchers directly." "Assuming that this anthology will appeal to poetry readers and bird watchers alike, the book includes a list of the birds mentioned in each individual poem, and also an index so readers can track the various ways particular birds have been "perceived" in verse. The categories take their cues not from science, but from the poems, and thus they do not follow careful classifications of order, family, genus, species. The poets, who also come from every region in the country, are listed in "Habitat and Range," and more recent books are listed in "Additional Resources" so that interested readers can follow up on some of their favorites."--BOOK JACKET.
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