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Fabulae (Crab Orchard Award Series in Poetry)

Fabulae (Crab Orchard Award Series in Poetry)

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $13.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent, Intense Collection.
Review: As the title suggests, stories are a central theme in this collection. Katz is especially skilled at taking a fresh approach to historical places, figures, and events. One especially memorable poem, "A Nation So Ignorant of Itself" deals with John Wesley Powell exploring the Grand Canyon, the experience itself and afterwards how terrible it must be to discuss what he has seen with others, that they can never see or understand. Other poems are incredibly location based, like "In the Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague" which focuses on a crowded cemetery where tombstones are placed on top of each other and look "like molars in a small jaw."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: fabulae
Review: Sometimes I feel bulldozed, I feel burrowed and tunnelled reading this collection. Joy Katz is a remarkable poet. She has has written a stunning book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: fabulae
Review: Sometimes I feel bulldozed, I feel burrowed and tunnelled reading this collection. Joy Katz is a remarkable poet. She has has written a stunning book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Blends the art of a fabulator with the art of a sculptor
Review: The poetry of Joy Katz blends the art of a fabulator with the art of a sculptor to create a sensual and impressive autobiographical poetry in Fabulae. Her poetry ranges from the comedic to the philosophical and weaves a linguistic delight through her remarkable and memorable use of word rhythms and imagery. The Word Wife: When the silence between them/was a new thing--a morning in a garden--/he took a pencil and sketched her feed./He matched her ankles/in crisp lines falling like wisps/of hair from a boy's first cut./The quick strokes were moths/lighting her body, the background/white, like the word wife, first light/touching the violet's hair. The new word/husband, hush of a car up the street./Pigeons swallowing their tongues beneath the eaves.


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