American wildflowers A literary field guide

Book - 2022

American Wildflowers: A Literary Field Guide collects poems, essays, and letters from the 1700s to the present that focus on wildflowers and their place in our culture and in the natural world. Editor Susan Barba has curated a selection of plants and texts that celebrate diversity: There are foreign-born writers writing about American plants and American writers on non-native plants. There are rural writers with deep regional knowledge and urban writers who are intimately acquainted with the nature in their neighborhoods. There are female writers, Black writers, gay writers, indigenous writers. Included here is the work of botanists such as William Bartram, George Washington Carver, and Robin Wall Kimmerer, and horticultural writers like Ne...ltje Blanchan and Eleanor Peřnyi. There are prose pieces by Aldo Leopold, Lydia Davis, and Aimee Nezhukumatathil. And most of all, there are poems: from Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, William Carlos Williams and T. S. Eliot to Allen Ginsberg and Robert Creeley, Lucille Clifton and Louise Gl

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

808.80364/American
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 808.80364/American Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Essays
Published
New York : Abrams 2022.
Language
English
Other Authors
Leanne Shapton (illustrator)
Physical Description
339 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 320)
ISBN
9781419760167
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Presented as a field guide with abstract watercolor illustrations by Shapton, this anthology offers a rich compendium of classic and contemporary writings inspired by wildflowers. The table of contents reads "List of texts, arranged by species," in keeping with the motif that allows Allen Ginsberg's "Sunflower Sutra" to appear next to Henri Cole's "Sunflower" (both under the header "ASTERACEAE / DAISY family"). Certain authors' works appear in a category all their own, such as Denise Levertov's "The Message," in which forget-me-nots (of the order of Boraginaceae) are described as "Ripple of blue in which are/ distinct blues. Bold/ centaur-seahorse-salt-carnation/ flower of work and transition." Whitman and Eliot appear under the Oleaceae/Olive family, while Lucille Clifton's brief "flowers" reads: "here we are/ running with the weeds/ colors exaggerated/ pistils wild/ embarrassing the calm family flowers oh/ here we are/ flourishing for the field/ and the name of the place/ is Love." The poems, essays, and letters collected span from the 18th century to today, making this a prismatic and dynamic work. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved