An Archeology of the Future

Author:   Emma Catherine Hoff
Publisher:   Children's Art Foundation - Stone Soup Inc.
ISBN:  

9780894091551


Pages:   76
Publication Date:   01 September 2023
Recommended Age:   From 13 to 18 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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An Archeology of the Future


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Overview

""The darkness isn't as bad / as people think."" So ends the first poem in Emma Catherine Hoff's numinous debut, An Archeology of the Future-before proceeding calmly, curiously into the dark. People weep in the streets. The snow closes its eyes. Birds scream, a question begs the world for its answer, everything is ""frozen yet moving."" Hoff's world, like ours, is ending, and yet this is not a tragedy: ""there was peace for Earth / with no one there."" Walking the tightrope between humor and despair, rationality and absurdism, the sublime and the material, Hoff's poems are elegant, wise, ageless. These are poems written against eternity.

Full Product Details

Author:   Emma Catherine Hoff
Publisher:   Children's Art Foundation - Stone Soup Inc.
Imprint:   Children's Art Foundation - Stone Soup Inc.
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.272kg
ISBN:  

9780894091551


ISBN 10:   0894091557
Pages:   76
Publication Date:   01 September 2023
Recommended Age:   From 13 to 18 years
Audience:   Young adult ,  Teenage / Young adult
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

"What I seek in poetry is the same thing astronomers seek: entire dark-dot planets hidden by lights too brilliant to see past. This is just what Emma Catherine Hoff delivers in An Archaeology of the Future. This collection is a garden of eurekas, a cavalcade of astonishments as, stanza by stanza, Hoff delivers the musings of a subtle intellect fed by a deep and abiding empathy for this world. The deftness of the prosody is only matched by its variety; influences range from the elegiac to the ekphrastic to the surreal to Black Mountain experiments in form, but all unified by a passionate yet quiet reverence and a love of language that would have made Auden sit up a little straighter. My urge, in fact, is to stop speaking generally and just quote to you from this wonder-stuffed collection. But there's no need. Open it, and read for yourself. -Carlos Hernandez, New York Times bestselling author of Sal and Gabi Break the Universe A young poet displays evidence of impending mastery. -Kirkus Like the Surrealists before her, Hoff can see into the emotional lives of the things we use every day, things we toss around carelessly. These poems bring them to life in a way that enriches all the lives around them, even the lives of the people we see in de Chirico paintings. Hoff is a great poet and these are poems that will truly move you. Her concerns are ageless. And she writes with a careful observing eye that makes even the imaginative moments feel palpably real. If one of my friends had written this beautifully when I was starting out, I would have probably quit, and doffed my cap to her and said ""you go on ahead"" or more likely, ""you're already there."" -Matthew Rohrer, author of The Others Hoff is related to Ovid, Blake, Rimbaud, Vallejo, Pessoa, Whitman, and Dickinson-not because she sounds like them (she doesn't) but because she sees like them. Because her vision is prophetic, profound, and panoramic. Because she is unafraid to write about the grandest of topics-love, war, death, apocalypse, God, and eternity. Because she writes about the past, present, and future all at once. Because she is a master of craft and a musician of as-yet unheard music (""The lips play leapfrog with rain and hail and snow""). Emma Hoff is a rare poet. And one of my favorites. -Conner Bassett, author of Gad's Book Is there any form that Emma Hoff can't undertake? Any fissure in the universe that she will fail to inspect and fracture further until she breaks into the realm of the hidden yet true? The delights to be uncovered in An Archeology of the Future strike me with awe, urgency, solace, and compassion. How daring, how beautiful, how extraordinary it is, in this moment of the world when our world feels so broken, that Mt. Parnassas is still at work, and Hoff is a voice so richly sowed. -Jenny Boully, a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow and author of Betwixt and Between: Essays on the Writing Life These are not small ponderings; they dig into our history to dislodge meaning, beauty, and an archeology of the future, a future which will, no doubt, contain further brilliance from Emma Hoff. -Melinda Wilson, Co-curator of the Poor Mouth Reading Series in the Bronx"


"This collection is a garden of eurekas, a cavalcade of astonishments. -Carlos Hernandez, New York Times bestselling author of Sal and Gabi Break the Universe A young poet displays evidence of impending mastery. -Kirkus Like the Surrealists before her, Hoff can see into the emotional lives of the things we use every day, things we toss around carelessly...If one of my friends had written this beautifully when I was starting out, I would have probably quit, and doffed my cap to her and said ""you go on ahead"" or more likely, ""you're already there."" -Matthew Rohrer, author of The Others Hoff is related to Ovid, Blake, Rimbaud, Vallejo, Pessoa, Whitman, and Dickinson-not because she sounds like them (she doesn't) but because she sees like them. Because her vision is prophetic, profound, and panoramic. Because she is unafraid to write about the grandest of topics-love, war, death, apocalypse, God, and eternity. Because she writes about the past, present, and future all at once. Because she is a master of craft and a musician of as-yet unheard music (""The lips play leapfrog with rain and hail and snow""). Emma Hoff is a rare poet. And one of my favorites. -Conner Bassett, author of Gad's Book Is there any form that Emma Hoff can't undertake? The delights to be uncovered in An Archeology of the Future strike me with awe, urgency, solace, and compassion. How daring, how beautiful, how extraordinary it is, in this moment of the world when our world feels so broken, that Mt. Parnassas is still at work, and Hoff is a voice so richly sowed. -Jenny Boully, a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow and author of Betwixt and Between: Essays on the Writing Life These are not small ponderings; they dig into our history to dislodge meaning, beauty, and an archeology of the future, a future which will, no doubt, contain further brilliance from Emma Hoff. -Melinda Wilson, Co-curator of the Poor Mouth Reading Series in the Bronx"


Author Information

Emma Catherine Hoff is a writer and poet from New York City, where she lives with her parents and her cat Gavroche. Her poems have appeared in the Rattle Young Poets Anthology, The Louisville Review, and Stone Soup Magazine. Her podcast, Poetry Soup, as well as book reviews and essays, appear regularly on the Stone Soup Blog. Her poetry collection An Archeology of the Future won Stone Soup's 2022 Book Contest.

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