Description
Poetry. Music. Runner-Up for Poetry in the 2016 New England Book Festival Awards. Winner of the Robinson Jeffers Prize. Love of music and honor for musicians are the heart of COLTRANE'S GOD, Donald Levering's 7th full-length collection of poems. In his joyful tribute to people's "language of emotion," country, blues, and jazz accompany life's knocks and peaks. Among the players are a street busker wailing laments in the rain, a choir boy whose voice is changing, an itinerant fiddler at a WPA work camp, romping barrelhouse piano players, and a woman singing scat in a tram tunnel. A prose opening section humorously recalls the author's childhood introduction to music in the context of his family and the era. One of the book's motifs is "ear worms," music that gets stuck in your head, ranging from Mozart to "The Bristol Stomp" to Oliver Nelson's scales of braided horns. In the title poem, the voice of the god of John Coltrane admonishes the famed sax player to "blister their ears with arpeggios." As in his other books, Levering's prosody is delightfully musical.
"These are poems of homage, not just to musicians from city-street buskers and country fiddle players to jazz greats and classical composers, but music itself as nourishment and companion to the imagination. Levering's devotion is evident in the eclecticism and easy knowledge his poems convey. And they evoke that extra ingredient that can make us stop in our tracks when hearing an almost forgotten song—nostalgia, the interweaving of song into the larger fabric of one's life. Through imagery and finely tuned language, Levering has managed to re-create his experience of music into experience one can access as easily as notes overheard from an open window."—Leslie Ullman, Winner of the Yale Younger Poets Award and the Iowa Poetry Prize
"Levering's COLTRANE'S GOD is a hip, historical collection of "flatted thirds and sevenths," full of those characteristic, jazzy blue notes, poems sung as if through saxophone and smoke. Levering has an ear and eye for jazz, and what he writes here is part history, part song, following a lineage of jazz poets, including Hughes, Kerouac, Baraka, Carruth, Harper, and Mackey."—Kevin Rabas, Author of Bird's Horn (Coal City Review Press, 2007)
"COLTRANE'S GOD is an informative, highly original, and insightful collection of poems and a fitting testament to Levering's passion for "music" in its manifestations as the purest "voice" of the human soul. His allusions are both exhaustive and spot-on, from Beethoven and Telemann to The Beatles and Chuck Berry; from Schubert and Tchaikovsky to Robert Johnson and Bill Monroe. The sounds of the natural world are also celebrated: Levering writes of "whale song," "cricket chirp," "bat click," "swallow titter" and the "trilling of the red-winged blackbird." Levering's mellifluous diction is the verbal equivalent of Coltrane's "sheets of sound." COLTRANE'S GOD is a stunning poetic achievement."—Larry D. Thomas, Member, Texas Institute of Letters, 2008 Texas Poet Laureate
Author Bio
Former NEA Fellow Donald Levering was born in Kansas City and received his MFA from Bowling Green State University. He has worked as a teacher on the Diné reservation, groundskeeper, and human services administrator. Among his recent honors are the 2018 Carve Poetry Contest Winner, the 2017 Tor House Robinson Jeffers Prize, the 2014 Literal Latté Prize. ANY SONG WILL DO (Red Mountain Press, 2019) is his 15th poetry book. His other books include PREVIOUS LIVES (Red Mountain Press, 2018), COLTRANE'S GOD (Red Mountain Press, 2015), THE WATER LEVELING WITH US(Red Mountain Press, 2014), and ALGONQUINS PLANTED SALMON (Red Mountain Press, 2012). Garrison Keillor featured a poem from Levering's last book, PREVIOUS LIVES, in his AWriter's Almanac@ podcast. Levering's poems have appeared in Bloomsbury Review, Columbia, Commonweal, Harpur Palate, Hiram Poetry Review, Hollins Critic, Hunger Mountain, Poet & Critic, Poet Lore, Southern Poetry Review, and Yemassee. He is father to a daughter and son and is married to the artist and poet Jane Shoenfeld. He lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he volunteers as a citizenship tutor.
Author City: SANTA FE, NM USA