Peasant

Author:   Annie Woodford
Publisher:   Pulley Press
ISBN:  

9798999015815


Pages:   82
Publication Date:   16 September 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Peasant


Overview

Peasant takes its title from a poem by Nikki Giovanni: ""peasant food . . . must be mixed with your hands. Grandmother taught us that."" These poems aspire to the richness of peasant food (and assert that there is a culture in poor rural America that is complex and beautiful). The painter Alison Hall-who grew up with Woodford in Henry County, Virginia-describes this sometimes junky, haphazard beauty as ""architecture without an architect"" and Peasant tries to honor that aesthetic. Plainness and matrilineal power reverberate down through the generations in Peasant, offering continued sustenance and not just survival, but celebration. Arranged in four sections, the poems in this collection begin by taking the reader into what V.S. Naipaul termed ""the ruin of the country,"" where unregulated capitalism has left behind its detritus and damage, even as there is a deep human urge toward those nevertheless generous landscapes and communities. As the collection progresses, it builds toward an affirmation of nature's persistence in the rural landscape of a declining empire. Yes, Woodford examines Southern Appalachia as a sort of colonial holding of the United States, but this collection ends by rejoicing in how folks (and nature) create spaces of freedom despite the appropriation of labor, natural resources, and culture to enrich those outside the region. The poems in Peasant attempt to channel the life-force that won't be denied despite such hardships. As Isaac Babel describes folk singers, so may the reader leave these poems thinking they ""might not have much in the way of a voice, but they have a joy, mixed with passion, lightness, and a touching, charming, sad feeling for life. A life that is good, terrible, and exceedingly interesting.""

Full Product Details

Author:   Annie Woodford
Publisher:   Pulley Press
Imprint:   Pulley Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.80cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.109kg
ISBN:  

9798999015815


Pages:   82
Publication Date:   16 September 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Annie Woodford studied poetry at Hollins College and teaches at Wilkes Community College in North Carolina. She is the author of Bootleg (Groundhog Poetry Press, 2019) and Where You Come from Is Gone (Mercer UP, 2022), which was awarded the 2022 Weatherford Award for Appalachian Poetry. Her micro-chapbook, When God Was a Child, was published by Bull City Press in 2023. She has been the recipient of the Jean Ritchie Fellowship, the Thelma Smallwood Scholarship at the Appalachian Writers' Workshop, and the Guy Owen Prize by Southern Poetry Review. She has also been a Rona Jaffe Poetry Scholar at Bread Loaf and a Tennessee Williams Scholar at the Sewanee Writers' Conference. In 2023, she was the writer-in-residence at Radford University's Highland Summer Conference.

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