How to See the World: Poems

Author:   Paula J Lambert
Publisher:   Bottom Dog Press
ISBN:  

9781947504233


Pages:   94
Publication Date:   02 September 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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How to See the World: Poems


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Overview

In How to See the World, Lambert takes us deftly along as she examines the new reality in which we've all awakened in 2020. She peels back its complicated layers with adept use of metaphor, as well as a revelatory tone that will have readers doubling back to unfold new meanings in a line, a verse, or a poem. Real moments of brilliance sparkle calling us to look beyond surface and pattern to recognize something beyond ourselves, even while we languish in a groundswell of change. Tell me moonlight can't speak...she writes, then convinces us that it can. While pandemic is here and unavoidable, do not approach this collection as an outgassing of that reality. It is about much more--how interconnected we all are while teetering at the brink of change and that we must witness the miracle, not turn away. --Rose M. Smith, author of Unearthing Ida

Full Product Details

Author:   Paula J Lambert
Publisher:   Bottom Dog Press
Imprint:   Bottom Dog Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.150kg
ISBN:  

9781947504233


ISBN 10:   1947504231
Pages:   94
Publication Date:   02 September 2020
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.

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Reviews

"How To See The World startles me awake, my vision clearer and my inner clock rewound. Paula J. Lambert's radical compassion asks us to ""Rise up for what you believe in: the sun, / the moon, the glaciers melting. Ancestors calling our names."" Each poem wakes us to blossom, birdsong, breath. Her work ensures that we are more fully alive, more present. - Laura Grace Weldon, author of Blackbird, 2019 Ohio Poet of the Year Paula J. Lambert's poetry is always visionary, but visionary on a human scale. She sees with clarity not just the people near us, whom we can touch, but also those out of reach. Sanitizing groceries, we realize everything we do ""now extends to something else, every touch, every thought, every / worry, each fond thought."" Still more, she touches people who may be lost to us, or seem so. A dead thrush found in the road is reminder that ""The world is a terrible, beautiful / place where those not with us are with us / all the time."" The poet's vision becomes our vision, and we are stronger and wiser for having seen the world--terrible and beautiful--through her eyes. - Richard Carr, author of Our Blue Earth"


How To See The World startles me awake, my vision clearer and my inner clock rewound. Paula J. Lambert's radical compassion asks us to Rise up for what you believe in: the sun, / the moon, the glaciers melting. Ancestors calling our names. Each poem wakes us to blossom, birdsong, breath. Her work ensures that we are more fully alive, more present. - Laura Grace Weldon, author of Blackbird, 2019 Ohio Poet of the Year Paula J. Lambert's poetry is always visionary, but visionary on a human scale. She sees with clarity not just the people near us, whom we can touch, but also those out of reach. Sanitizing groceries, we realize everything we do now extends to something else, every touch, every thought, every / worry, each fond thought. Still more, she touches people who may be lost to us, or seem so. A dead thrush found in the road is reminder that The world is a terrible, beautiful / place where those not with us are with us / all the time. The poet's vision becomes our vision, and we are stronger and wiser for having seen the world--terrible and beautiful--through her eyes. - Richard Carr, author of Our Blue Earth


Paula J. Lambert's poetry is always visionary, but visionary on a human scale. She sees with clarity not just the people near us, whom we can touch, but also those out of reach. Sanitizing groceries, we realize everything we do now extends to something else, every touch, every thought, every / worry, each fond thought. Still more, she touches people who may be lost to us, or seem so. A dead thrush found in the road is reminder that The world is a terrible, beautiful / place where those not with us are with us / all the time. The poet's vision becomes our vision, and we are stronger and wiser for having seen the world--terrible and beautiful--through her eyes. - Richard Carr, author of Our Blue Earth How To See The World startles me awake, my vision clearer and my inner clock rewound. Paula J. Lambert's radical compassion asks us to Rise up for what you believe in: the sun, / the moon, the glaciers melting. Ancestors calling our names. Each poem wakes us to blossom, birdsong, breath. Her work ensures that we are more fully alive, more present. - Laura Grace Weldon, author of Blackbird, 2019 Ohio Poet of the Year


Author Information

Paula J. Lambert, is a native of Massachusetts and graduate of Butera School of Art in Boston, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Bowling Green State University in Ohio. She has been recipient of awards from the Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Awards and Greater Columbus Arts Council. She has published five chapbooks of poetry and currently directs Full/Crescent Press, a small press publisher of poetry books and broadsides. She lives in Columbus with her husband Michael Perkins.

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