"America's premier living military veteran poet reveals the long scars left by Vietnam and the ghosts encountered at life's end." --
Americas premier living military veteran poet reveals the long scars left by Vietnam and the ghosts encountered at lifes end.
Winner of the Isabella Gardner Award
In this Isabella Gardner Award-winning collection of poems, Bruce Weigl meditates on the ghosts and the grace one encounters in lifes second act. A celebrated poet and veteran of the Vietnam War, Weigl offers a nuanced sense of aging as a departure and death as a returning home. With a sages eye for mindfulness and a soldiers longing for the country where he served, Weigls poems reveal the long scars left by Vietnam and the new possibilities one encounters in the wake of life-altering experiences.
Recenzijos
Weigls personal reckoning with trauma is juxtaposed against the title poems polemic against war, a lengthy plea for empathy and tolerance that establishes war, police brutality, mass shootings, and anti-immigrant sentiments as intricately connected through a web of violence Americans have been taught to accept as necessary. Publishers Weekly
All of Bruce Weigl's poems are of high quality and all should be purchased for any collection of literature dealing with the Vietnam War. The VVA Veteran
Bruce Weigls On the Shores of Welcome Home deals with life and death matters, embracing earthy questions but always sighting a bead of true light. The mind and flesh of the soldier, of the survivor, of the seeker is laid bare as brotherly love. Weigl is always in at least two worlds at oncepresent and past; here and beyond. He poses questions of motion and emotion without easy Western answers. In fact, theres nothing in this map of naked truths thats easy. And, at times, this speaker of lyric reckoning holds himself accountable for the moments he said I dare you. That is, On the Shores of Welcome Home underscores how we are indeed connectedresponsible for and to each other. This collection pinpoints days and nights of everyday life under fire, with penetrating grace notes. Yusef Komunyakaa, author of Neon Vernacular: New and Selected Poems
Few poets of any generation have written so searingly of the trauma of war, inscribing its wound while refusing the fragile suture of redemption. In this and in the breadth of his accomplishment, Bruce Weigl is one of the most important poets of our time. Carolyn Forché, author of What You Have Heard is True: A Memoir of Witness and Resistance
"'I dont think its my place to breathe, Mr. Night.,' writes Bruce Weigl, while giving us a sweeping, beautiful collection of poems that breathes deeply as it takes us from Ha Noi to Ohio via elegies and lyrics that are urgent and unsparing in their clarity ('no one / even sees you / standing there in your sixty-two years, soldier'). I opened this book on the beautiful poem, 'The Ineffable as Sad,' and was immediately hooked: in this time of crisis, even in his own uncertainties ('a sky in my head tonight...I don't know what it wants'), Weigl always finds the lyric pulse, a flame of our moment." Ilya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic and Dancing in Odessa
Bruce Weigls unique verbal music is a song indivisible from its experiential roots. Events of childhood in the industrial Midwest, of young manhood flung unwitting into another land and culture, of the years of ongoing pain, of rare joy, of striving and illumination, are one fabric, not episodic. Denise Levertov
Daugiau informacijos
Short-listed for Pulitzer Prize 2013 (United States).Galley mailing to key reviewers and media outlets 4-5 months prior to publication.
Advanced review copies and press materials sent to targeted list of 150-200 reviewers. Additional review copies available by request: contact@boaeditions.org.
National advertising: Poets & Writers, American Poets, and the Academy of American Poets newsletter.
Outreach to online media and bloggers including BuzzFeed, Bustle, Book Riot, Literary Hub, etc. for features on Vietnam veterans and intercultural communication.
Buy-ins to relevant academic conferences, trade shows, and publications: American Library Association Annual Meeting, CBSD Sales, and Academic catalogs, etc.
Fall book announcements submitted to Publishers Weekly.
Online/social media campaign: Extensive promotion through BOA's website, blog, e-newsletter (7,400+ subscribers), Facebook (7,000+ followers), Twitter (9,000 followers), Instagram (2,500+ followers), and Pinterest (840+ followers) accounts.
Full-page feature in in-house catalog.
E-postcards will be sent to the author's professional contacts as well as BOAs academic contacts, reviewer contacts, bookstore contacts, and literary bloggers.
Simultaneous ebook and print publication. Ebook ISBN will be included on all press materials, author and publisher websites, and whenever print ISBN is listed.
Possible events in Chicago, IL, Cleveland, OH, Boston, MA, Ithaca, NY, and elsewhere.
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The Elephant Gift in the Room |
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Painted Box Buried in the Yard |
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Anecdote of the Impresario of My Brain |
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Some Stages of the Mayfly |
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River of Blood in One Man |
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Fragments in Translation from the Vietnamese |
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Words for My Pal Who Is Dead |
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The Long-Term Consequences of the Convoy Leading to Pegasus in the Fallen World |
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The Unbearable Weight of a Friend |
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Altarpiece of the Misericordia |
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The Ha Noi Winds Bringing Winter to the Old-World Elegy |
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On the Shores of Welcome Home |
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Making the Conscious Darkness |
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Bodhisattva Blurred by Lilies in the Garden |
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The Love I Thought Would Save Me |
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Modern Paradox Sutra Fragment |
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The Sixty-sixth Year of My Imagining |
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Dismantling Bruce Weigl at Gate Number 7 |
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For a Friend Whose Son Is in Prison |
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The Clock on the Tower in Ha Noi |
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Her Discontent like Lava Soap Burns in the Eyes |
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A Small Song for Immigrants |
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The Failure of Cognitive Therapy on April 26, 2015 |
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For Steven, Boone School, 1956 |
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Thinking About the Chinese Poet |
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Crazy with His Anguish and Dumb with Grief |
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Acknowledgments |
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About the Author |
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Colophon |
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The author of over twenty books of poetry, translations and essays, Bruce Weigls most recent collection, The Abundance of Nothing, was a finalist for the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. He has won the Lannan Literary Award for Poetry, the Robert Creeley Award, The Cleveland Arts Prize, The Tu Do Chien Kien Award from the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, fellowships at Breadloaf and Yaddo, and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2018, he was awarded the Premiul Tudor Arghezi Prize from the National Museum of Literature of Romania. Weigls poetry, essays, articles, reviews and translations have appeared in The Nation, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Harvard Review, Harpers, and elsewhere. His poetry has been translated into Romanian, Spanish, Vietnamese, Chinese, Bulgarian, Japanese, Korean and Serbian. He lives in Oberlin, OH.