Meteoric flowers

Elizabeth Willis

Book - 2006

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811.54/Willis
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2nd Floor New Shelf 811.54/Willis (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 5, 2024
Subjects
Genres
poetry
Poetry
Published
Middletown, CT : Wesleyan University Press [2006]
Language
English
Main Author
Elizabeth Willis (author)
Physical Description
79 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780819568496
  • The Similitute of This Great Flower
  • Sympathetic Inks
  • Her Mossy Couch
  • The Great Egg of Night
  • The Steam Engine
  • The Nettle
  • Of the Gulf Stream
  • A Description of the Poison Tree
  • Grateful as Asparagus
  • The Oldest Part of the Earth
  • This Circumstance is Worth Further Attention
  • Devil Bush
  • Glittering Shafts of War
  • Verses Omitted
  • On the Resemblance of Some Flowers to Insects
  • The Principal Catastrophe
  • Irritative Fevers
  • The Skirt of Night
  • Of Which I Shall Have Occasion to Speak Again
  • The Happiest of Poets
  • Diana's Trees
  • Her Bright Career
  • Phosphorescent Trains
  • Expiring Groans
  • The Most Powerful Machine in the World
  • Plants Possess a Voluntary Power of Motion
  • Buds and Bulbs
  • Verses Omitted by Mistake
  • Pictures Connected by a Slight Festoon of Ribbons
  • The Portland Vase
  • Oil and Water
  • Rosicrucian Machinery
  • Tiptoe Lightining
  • With New Prolific Power
  • Viewless Floods of Heat
  • The Ghost of Hamlet
  • Near and More Near
  • Hercules Conquers Achelous
  • Departure of the Nymphs Like Northern Nations Skating on the Ice
  • Bright O'er the Floor
  • Solar Volcanos
  • Errata
  • Loud Cracks from Ice Mountains Explained
  • Why No New Planets are Ejected from the Sun
  • Ancient Subterranean Fires
  • Immortal Sire
  • Plundering Honey
  • A Bird of Our Country
  • One Great TIde
  • Fuel of the Lower People
  • In Flowers Concealed
  • Accidental Breezes
  • The Earth's Nucleus
  • Primeval Islands
  • Ferns, Mosses, Flags
  • Note of the Text
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Guided by the spirit of 18th-century botanist and intellectual Erasmus Darwin (Charles's grandfather), the poems of Willis's fourth book attempt to reclaim a natural world that has been made hazy by postindustrial and popular culture. The 55 pieces that make up this cohesive collection are divided into four cantos of prose poems, which are interrupted by verses mimicking the miscellany found in Darwin's Botanic Garden, from which Willis (Turneresque, 1990) also takes her titles ("Grateful as Asparagus," "Loud Cracks from Ice Mountains Explained"). Disjunctive and densely packed poems mix pastoral language ("...a tree I think is sweeping out this country air") with postmodern ideas ("...America owns the moon") and up-to-the-minute phraseology ("...it's mist upon the blog") to convey an earnest desire to relate to nature: "I do this work to word you." (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The poems in Willis's latest collection (after Turneresque) belong to the "if it sounds good, it need not make any sense" school of prose poetry. If words were merely sounds, Willis's poetry by free association might be memorable. But words have meaning, and they say something or should. Although they're bursting with energy, consonance, and half rhymes, these poems say very little. Here's an example from "Her Bright Career": "The human heart is like cheese. Still justice may emerge from love, stained with grass, in fiercer neighborhoods." A little of this goes a long way. Willis suggests that her poems were inspired by Botanic Garden, a book of poetry by Erasmus Darwin (grandfather of Charles Darwin). Darwin's preferences for "unwieldy asymmetries and sudden leaps between botany, political and aesthetic history, technology, and pastoral romance" are evident throughout, as are malapropisms, puns, alliteration, and fractured clich?s. From these, Willis constructs a sequence of words, which, at its best, may be poetic, and, at its worst, sounds like bumper stickers stuck haphazardly together. Suitable for academic libraries only.-Diane Scharper, Towson Univ., Marylanda (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.