|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
Overview“We breathe, and then / vanish,” proclaims a speaker in Once When Green, a new collection by accomplished poet Mark Irwin. While deeply personal, the book engages the earth, “gulls, / gray, quarreling air, their ha-ha-ha-ing at our trace / of garbage and carbon,” and addresses mortality as well as the consequences of global warming—how it impacts humans, animals, and the plant life that sustains us all. Poems here accent the lateness of our attempt to control pollution, while interrogating the natural world through myth and the voicings of different creatures, beings displaced or relegated to other spaces, including apes, birds, and an arcade bear that reflects: “I once thought that was freedom— / but how in a receding wilderness no longer mine?” Sighting those areas where metropolis and wilderness collide, Irwin conveys the tension between the natural and digital world as a speaker laments: “I am so lonely for a river’s one rushing / minute with scuttling crayfish, nymphs, and eddies blurring clouds, not its / imagined thousand pixels changing colors toward forms / on a screen.” These poems remind us how forms of the spirit cannot be bound by technology and capitalism, imploring “how to become explorers, cartographers / again.” Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mark IrwinPublisher: University of Massachusetts Press Imprint: University of Massachusetts Press Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781625348654ISBN 10: 1625348657 Pages: 80 Publication Date: 30 April 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""So often we consider how to tell the story of our beginnings, but what is it to persist, through language, in a suspended state of endings? To 'witness a world that is perishing' even as one is 'lonely for the present'? Once When Green is a primer in listening to that which we are unaccustomed to conceiving of as having sound, relayed in a rush of lyric language after the lilting of waves and movement of stars."" --Abigail Chabitnoy, author of In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful" Author InformationMark Irwin is the author of twelve collections of poetry, including Joyful Orphan, Shimmer, and A Passion According to Green. His poetry and essays have appeared in The American Poetry Review, The Atlantic Monthly, Conjunctions, Harper’s, The Kenyon Review, New York Times, and Paris Review, among others. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |