Glitter road Poems

January Gill O'Neil, 1969-

Book - 2024

Glitter Road reclaims the vulnerable, intimate parts of a life in transition, and celebrates womanhood through awakenings, landscapes, meanders, and possibilities amidst the backdrop of a Mississippi season.

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811.6/O'Neil
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2nd Floor New Shelf 811.6/O'Neil (NEW SHELF) Due May 8, 2024
Subjects
Genres
poetry
Poetry
Published
Fort Lee, New Jersey : CavanKerry Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
January Gill O'Neil, 1969- (author)
Edition
First Edition
Item Description
Subtitle from cover.
Physical Description
87 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781960327017
  • Autopsy
  • What's Left
  • Narcissi in January
  • I Take Off My Black Dress
  • "What's Love Got to Do with It"
  • On What Would Have Been Our 20th Wedding Anniversary
  • Begin Again
  • On the Edge of a Field in Sumner, Mississippi
  • Low Delta Country
  • Rebel Rebel
  • Bathtub Graveyard
  • Elegy for the End of the World
  • Jazzfesting in Place
  • Black Women
  • After Daunte Wright's Murder, I Teach a Poetry Class to High Schoolers on Zoom
  • No Joke
  • Proving a Theory
  • Cartwheel
  • Regret Nothing
  • At the Rededication of the Emmett Till Memorial, Glendora, MS
  • Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market
  • Rowan Oak
  • I Slept in John Grisham's Bed
  • In the Blue Hour
  • Elation
  • Woman Swallowed by Python in Her Cornfield
  • The Beyond Place
  • The Morning Before the Rains Came
  • Cheaters
  • Harvest
  • Postbellum
  • Three white Ole Miss students use guns to vandalize a memorial to lynching victim Emmett Till
  • Driving Through Mississippi After the Capitol Hill Riot
  • Robert Johnson's Grave
  • The Great Hello
  • Boyfriend Pantoum
  • Dark Matter
  • Axilla
  • Dragonfly
  • Clit Ode
  • From Memory
  • Bloom
  • On Hearing Mississippi's Governor Declare April "Confederate Heritage Month"
  • The River Remembers
  • Mississippi Season
  • The Map
  • For Ella
  • Inheritance
  • Sheltering in Place
  • Manifesto
  • Aubade
  • Glitter Road
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

O'Neil's ruminative fourth collection (after Rewilding) explores the triumphs and traumas of daily life. The author's journey to Mississippi from the Northeast after the death of a partner is central, mixing with memory in the opening poem, "Autopsy": "you looked at me like a stranger, already estranged from this life to the next./ This is not an elegy or an apology, the lungs taking in too much water--/ this is a memory coming up for air." Reflections on present joys are laced with the heartache of the South's brutal past. Much of the book is dedicated to the tragic story of Emmett Till, a young Black teen who was lynched in 1955. Place becomes a character: "At Mississippi's crossroads,/ I've come to see what's left,/ what's remained unclaimed for decades: cypress, palmetto, tupelo, river birch./ To love the magnolia and lament the smell. This place is not finished with me." In "On the Edge of a Field in Summer," the speaker remarks: "I break off a branch/ to feel trauma in my hands--a reminder that I have risked so little to be here,/ not even the shirt off my back." These poems memorably navigate the braiding of love, tragedy, resilience, and parenthood. (Feb.)

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