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Dark Energy

Poems

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A new collection from the awardwinning poet and author of the bestselling novel Gap Creek
In the words of Poetry magazine, Robert Morgan’s poems “shine with beauty that transcends locale.” The work in his newest collection, rooted in his native Blue Ridge Mountains, explores the mysteries and tensions of family and childhood, the splendors and hidden dramas of the natural world, and the agriculture that supports all culture. Morgan’s voice is vigorous and exact, opening doors for the reader, finding unexpected images and connections. The poems reach beyond surfaces, to the strange forces inside atoms, our genes, our heritage, and outward to the farthest movements of galaxies, the dark energy we cannot explain but recognize in our bones and blood, in our deepest memories and imagination.
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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2015

      Author of the novel Gap Creek, an Oprah Pick, Morgan writes poetry grounded in the natural world and particularly the very earth of his native Blue Ridge Mountains. (His most recent poetry collection, 2011's Terroir, attests to that.) In heartfelt, plainspoken language, his book proceeds through four sections. The first reflects largely on past natural history, explaining that of booming tectonic shifts "the Indians said the peaks/ were talking to each other in/ the idiom that mountains use/ across the mighty distances" and that with the death of the large land mammals "Eden ...shrank/ to just a regular promised land/ to fit our deadly, human scale." The second section sweetly contemplates childhood ("All would be possible if I/ just got beyond the garden fence, / ...beyond my languor" and the third the splendors of nature, from seeds to sleet to hawks. The fourth is more conjectural, reflecting on the noble metals' "beauty, bright and sterile/ like everything immortal," for instance, and how the sound of hammering next door eventually creates a home. VERDICT Morgan isn't here to break ground (at least metaphorically) but to provide the pleasures of good, old-fashioned poetry, which he certainly does.--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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