Dear specimen Poems

W. J. Herbert, 1951-

Book - 2021

"In poems written for the daughter she will leave behind, the dying speaker of "Dear Specimen" examines grief, culpability, and love, asking: what value can we ascribe to our lives and do we as a species deserve to survive?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Boston : Beacon Press [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
W. J. Herbert, 1951- (author)
Physical Description
xv, 95 pages ; 22 cm
Awards
National Poetry Series winner (2020).
ISBN
9780807007594
  • Foreword
  • I.
  • A Homo Sapiens on the Brink of Extinction Speaks to the Fossil Mosasaurus
  • Lyuba
  • Speak to Me
  • After a Miscarriage, My Daughter Asks
  • Millipede
  • Aerial View
  • Least Tern
  • Seamless Bead
  • Embryonic Daughter
  • Fragile Eagle
  • II.
  • Mounting the Dove Box
  • Resin Specimen
  • Dark Season
  • Dusky and Zigzag Salamanders
  • The Seer
  • Nautiloid
  • After My Diagnosis, Sarah Asks
  • Water Scorpion, Magnified 40X
  • Waterfowl, Dovekie
  • White-Tail
  • III.
  • Celestial Mechanics
  • American Beaver
  • After His Nightmare, Sarah Asks
  • Fledgling
  • Speciesism
  • Squander
  • Tipping Point
  • Errant Eagle
  • Put Bones in Pit When Finished
  • If Oil Rigs Raise You Like Lazarus from the Shale of the Permian Basin
  • IV.
  • Abnormal Echo
  • Before the Bonfire
  • Bridge Constructs in Modern Technology
  • Cardinal, You Would Not Believe
  • Hybrid
  • A Pastoral Topography
  • Riddles of Flock & Bone
  • Homo Sapiens
  • In the End, Sarah Asks
  • Shanidar, First Flower People
  • V.
  • The Smell of Almost Rain
  • Sea Lily
  • At the Museum of Permian Extinctions
  • Triage
  • American Copperhead
  • After My Burial, Sarah Asks
  • Dear Specimen
  • Day Shift/Night Shift
  • At the Sea Floor Exploration Exhibit, Sarah Asks
  • Epilogue: To a Trilobite
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Library Journal Review

What secrets do fossils reveal about the past? What clues will we leave for the future from this climate disaster age? What truths do the dying share with the living? In this 2020 National Poetry Series-winning collection, Herbert writes movingly about a world of extinction, using the lenses of fossils and storytelling to create an involving worldview. She presents Lyuba, a baby mammoth excised from the tundra; an extinct bison skeleton; and a jarred tern with a broken spine, as well as current beauties: wisteria winding around an arbor, a bird gracing a sick loved one's window. The writer's gift for deep seeing elevates even the smallest of details; she describes a centipede's legs as "a tiny legion / yoked to the oar." In a lesser writer's hands, these poems might have been dark, even chilling, yet here they often uplift: "Yes, they will let me pet you, / dear Deer." VERDICT In mostly short poems, Herbert describes a vibrant yet highly vulnerable world. Occasionally, the writer focuses too much on scientific nomenclature, but usually she breathes life into fossils, skeletons, and nature today, even our world in its current damaged state. A unique and thrilling collection that pulses with wonder; not to be missed.--Doris Lynch, Monroe Cty. P.L., Bloomington, IN

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