Dear Three Pounds

Author:   Richard Martin
Publisher:   Spuyten Duyvil
ISBN:  

9781963908695


Pages:   142
Publication Date:   15 April 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Dear Three Pounds


Overview

""The sun is big...and we're debris"" and there is a lot to talk about in between. The voice of the anti-hero moves from ""clumps of hard experience"" to ""silence and rivers."" The consciousness of writing from ""moment to moment"" displays autobiography, travel, work, romance. All that makes up the life of Richard Martin. Get a drink, sit down, read and respond.

Full Product Details

Author:   Richard Martin
Publisher:   Spuyten Duyvil
Imprint:   Spuyten Duyvil
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.200kg
ISBN:  

9781963908695


ISBN 10:   1963908694
Pages:   142
Publication Date:   15 April 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
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.

Table of Contents

Reviews

""Richard Martin's poems bring us face to face with the grim reality faced every day in a hospital, any hospital. From nurse to doctor, chaplain to administrator to orderly, we see how hospital employees react to the circumstances of their work. But the center of this collection are the patients. Martin's series on mental patients and cancer patients are powerful and riveting and lead to the inevitable question which grows out of these poems: 'How can on man stand this work?' The answer lies in Martin's tough yet compassion stance."" Jim Daniels, on Dream of Long Headdress: Poems from a Thousand Hospitals ""Richard Martin knows how our profound sorrow moves. He is the chronicler of the empty dynamism of this culture, but he knows its joys too. In the fast-paced world of his verse there beats a fierce and oddly tonic heart."" Andrei Codrescu, on White Man Appears on Southern California Beach I've read your Modulations with real pleasure, liking the energy of your wit and invention. Everything resonates, and there's one verbal surprise after another...What's valuable in these poems is your escaping the all-too-usual triteness of the ametrical free-form poem that everybody writes nowadays (and reads in an adenoidal whine with fierce seriousness). The great American contribution to poetry may, after all, be sass (it's in Mark Twain and Whitman, in Wallace Stevens and WCW). The Scots and Irish are good at it, but as far as I know, nobody else. Many other virtues, also: idealism, a good eye, a respect for the language, and your heart in the right place. Congratulations & envy - Guy Davenport, on Modulations ""The sun is big...and we're debris"" and there is a lot to talk about in between. The voice of the anti-hero moves from ""clumps of hard experience"" to ""silence and rivers."" The consciousness of writing from ""moment to moment"" displays autobiography, travel, work, romance. All that makes up the life of Richard Martin. Get a drink, sit down, read and respond. Joanne Kyger, on Marks The lines of Richard Martin's poems have the crisp offhandedness of wire brushes deftly applied to drum skin. Indeed, they are musical, sensational and breed philosophical considerations. The lines seem to want to slip by unassumingly but that you pause on them because the words they are written in recall so appropriately a world you know-- a world that they illuminate and thus add to, rather than describe. Whole poems work that way, with a power and fascination that seem to have come from nowhere, or just around the corner. Bill Berkson, on Techniques in the Neighborhood of Sleep The book is too good to be legal. Dick Martin's lawless imagination consumes language at an alarming rate, seemingly heedless of conserving a literary future, and leaving in its wake reality-induced characters like drugs for addicts. Richard Blevins, on Chapter & Verse


Author Information

Richard Martin is a past recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship for Poetry, founder of the Big Horror Poetry Series (Binghamton, New York, 1983-1996) and a retired Boston Public Schools principal. He lives in the city with his family and pets.

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