Poetry. "'Already the unlasting has started,' Emily Carr writes in her fragmented and achingly beautiful how-to (warning/guideline/almanac) for young wives and young poets. Attempting to salvage the 'de-articulate, mirror/ the lunatic bride,' Carr quickly makes us aware that her speaker's grip on reality is made of borrowed lace. The result is a series of '36 fits.' Installed by month, each perfectly spare poem talks back to the contemporary canon--Frank Bidart, Nick Flynn, Larry Levis, CD Wright, and about twenty-five others. Yet the strongest poem in the book, 'yolk (v.)' happens to be the only 'fit' not 'after' someone else. When we finally get Carr's unfiltered voice it is naked, long-lined and stunning. Never have I seen a book so much about influence and identity as Directions for Flying. The female speaker, the young wife, fights to carve out her own identity, struggling with love and domesticity, its blessings and pitfalls. Among the chorus of poetic voices, Emily Carr's rises above--supreme, utterly unique, and definitely lasting"--Sarah Messer.
Author City: SANTA CRUZ, CA USA
Emily Carr is one of four poets featured in Toadlily Press's 2009 Quartet Series, By the Way Of. She has also received awards from Writers at Work, So To Speak, Elixir Press, and Poets Out Loud and been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. She is the author of DIRECTIONS FOR FLYING: 36 FITS: A YOUNG WIFE'S ALMANAC: RIGHT SIDE LOWER ARMS RAISE ARMS BEND KNEES REPEAT ON LEFT (Furniture Press Books, 2010) and 13 WAYS OF HAPPILY: BOOKS 1 & 2 (Parlor Press, 2010). Her poetry has been published most recently or is forthcoming in BOMBAY GIN, Interim, The Black Warrior Review, Hayden's Ferry Review, Gargoyle, Margie, Phoebe, Matrix, The Capilano Review, Dusie, ISLE, So To Speak, Caketrain, CV2, The Fiddlehead, The Antigonish Review, and Versal. Emily has also published scholarly work on poetics, performance, and pedagogy in Jacket, HOW2, ISLE, and English Studies in Canada.
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