American Sublime by Elizabeth Alexander

BUY IT NEW

  • $14.00 List price
    $13.30 Online Price
    $11.97 Member price
    (Save 14%)
    Limited Time Offer! Everyone receives the Member Price on books.
    See Details
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9781555974329&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

BUY IT USED

43 copies from $1.99

See All Available

Pick Me Up

Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.

Enter a zip code

(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: October 2005
  • 96pp
  • Sales Rank: 285,588
    Buy it Used: 43 copies from $1.99 See All Available

    Customers who bought this also bought

     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2005
    • Publisher: Graywolf Press
    • Format: Paperback, 96pp
    • Sales Rank: 285,588

    Synopsis

    A brilliant new collection by Elizabeth Alexander, whose "poems bristle with the irresistible quality of a world seen fresh" (Rita Dove, The Washington Post)

    Too many people have seen too much
    and lived to tell, or not tell, or tell
    with their silent, patterned bodies,
    their glass eyes, gone legs, flower-printed flesh . . .
    -from "Notes From"

    In her fourth remarkable collection, Elizabeth Alexander voices the outcries, dreams, and histories of an African American tradition that goes back to the slave rebellion on the Amistad and to the artists' canvases of nineteenth-century America. In persona poems, historical narratives, jazz riffs, sonnets, elegies, and a sequence of ars poetica, American Sublime is Alexander's most vivid and varied collection and affirms her place as one of America's most lively and gifted writers.

    "Alexander is an unusual thing, a sensualist of history, a romanticist of race. She weaves biography, history, experience, pop culture and dream. Her poems make the public and private dance together."
    --Chicago Tribune

    Publishers Weekly

    Barbecues, midwives, "Soyinka and Senghor," "Etheridge Knight, from prison," grandparents, students, "not Congo but Zaire," mom, "aggressive magic," jail, "my book," "children, fathers, brothers"-in this kaleidoscopic fourth collection, Alexander traces shifting global histories, family alliances, ways of working and being trapped, and means of escape in four broad parts. The first, "American Blue," takes in the U.S.'s post-`60s history alongside Alexander's child-, student- and adult-hood (with stops at Ellington/Strayhorn's '40s, Monk's '50s and a dream of Krishna along the way). A selection from a larger series titled "Ars Poetica" covers the ways poetry confronts history: " `Poetry,' I shouted, `Poetry,'/ I screamed, `Poetry,/ changes none of that/ by what it says/ or how it says, none./ But a poem is a living thing/ ... and as life/ it is all that can stand/ up to violence.' " "Amistad," the third section, channels the black Atlantic convincingly, while the last section, "American Sublime," consists of just two short lyrics; the latter ends "light that carries/ possibility, illuminates,// but can promise nothing but itself." This collection makes similarly restrained promises and delivers lucidly. (Oct. 1) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    Elizabeth Alexander is the author of three other poetry collections, most recently Antebellum Dream Book, as well as a collection of essays, The Black Interior.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    Be the first to write a review!