Partially kept / Martha Ronk.
Publication details: Callicoon, N.Y. : Nightboat Books ; Lebanon, NH : Distributed by University Press of New England, c2012.Description: 67 p. ; 21 cmISBN:- 9781937658014 (pbk.)
- 1937658015 (pbk.)
- PS3568 .O574 P37 2012
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | PS3568 .O574 P37 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001215689 |
Browsing NMC Library shelves, Shelving location: Stacks Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
PS3568 .O3125 W47 2012 When I was a child I read books / | PS3568 .O3152 S63 2013 Sparta / | PS3568 .O53 Z47 2000 For Rabbit, with love and squalor : an American read / | PS3568 .O574 P37 2012 Partially kept / | PS3568 .O77 A66 1992 Accidents of influence : writing as a woman and a Jew in America / | PS3568 .O855 A6 2007 Zuckerman bound : a trilogy and epilogue 1979-1985 / | PS 3568 .O855 A6 2017 Why write? : collected nonfiction, 1960-2013 / |
Poems.
Includes bibliographical references.
Part one, Partially kept: Or -- By parallaxis -- Sound -- The quincunx -- Things observable -- My partial tongue -- The particular state wherein you reside -- Grafting -- The dtalks of mint -- Alpines -- The fold -- Restless -- Refusal -- Downpour -- The bittern -- Incision -- Drowning -- Indistinguishable -- Position -- Manifest -- Colour -- Tendrils -- Simple -- The -- Part two, No sky: Relics -- Needful -- A slight thing -- A preconceived idea -- West wind -- Aporia -- A photograph of a side window -- Reading & writing & stealing -- After visiting for a time it is time to go (with umbrella) -- No sky -- Elegy -- Reading her thinking -- Incomplete form -- Interpretation -- Events -- An exceptional reality -- Part three, August : Remembrance -- Re-reading -- August -- The ardor -- Let rhetoric -- Dangling modifier -- Orlando -- With color -- A sickly Polaroid -- Attachments -- The light on the water.
"In Partially Kept, Ronk's elegiac and lyrical poetry responds to a world marked by transience and loss. Quotations by 17th century essayist Sir Thomas Browne highlight historical shifts in language, creating intertextual poems that consider the botanical world, the art of photography, and philosophy. Ronk's attention to rhetoric and representation speak to the shifting temporality between one thing and another, between one mind and another"--Publisher's website.
There are no comments on this title.