On a Stair
Penguin Poets
Ann Lauterbach - Author
Summary of On a Stair
Summary of On a Stair
Reviews for On a Stair
An Excerpt from On a Stair
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Ann Lauterbach's fifth collection takes its title from Emerson's great essay, Experience: "Where do we find ourselves?" he asks. Lauterbach's stair sits precariously between a quest for spiritual vitality and a sense of the overwhelming materiality of our world. Identifying with the clown, the nomad and the thief figures whose ghostly marginality haunt this book, Lauterbach brings us, with a dazzling range of formal and imagistic resources, to a new understanding of how language inscribes the relationship between self-knowledge and cultural meaning.
Nocturnal Reel Bramble Portrait Figure without Ground Poem of the Landscape On (Tower) Night Barrier Poise on Row Sequence with Dream Objects in Real Time Blake's Lagoon Free Fall On (Word) On (Open) A Clown, Some Colors, A Doll, Her Stories, A Song, A Moonlit Cove On (Thing) On (Dream) The Return of Weather Staircase A History Lesson Daylight Savings Time Delayed Elegy And The Question Of Poem with Last Line from Epictetus Here/This/There/That Auction On N/est Invocation |
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