Rock Tree Bird

Author:   Twyla M. Hansen
Publisher:   The Backwaters Press
ISBN:  

9781935218456


Pages:   102
Publication Date:   01 April 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Rock Tree Bird


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Overview

2018 Nebraska Book Award ​2018 WILLA Literary Award This collection of poems by the former State Poet of Nebraska covers significant emotional territory while remaining firmly grounded in the landscape. From memories of the isolation and beauty of growing up on a farm, to a burgeoning awareness as a teenager of the economic and cultural forces waged against family farming, to coming to terms with the legacies of her parents after their passing, and, finally, arriving at an appreciation of nature and the environment wherever and whenever she finds it, Twyla M. Hansen offers poems that are alternately sad, sweet, funny, moving, human, and humane.

Full Product Details

Author:   Twyla M. Hansen
Publisher:   The Backwaters Press
Imprint:   The Backwaters Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.159kg
ISBN:  

9781935218456


ISBN 10:   193521845
Pages:   102
Publication Date:   01 April 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Twyla Hansen's Rock - Tree - Bird is the poetry of an agriculturalist, a lover of soil and plants, of Great Plains waterways and skies, of the tiniest creatures in our grasses and soils and the largest turnings of our stars and cosmos. In this book, she sings of her parents and their deaths, of metamorphoses in the natural and human world and of our searches for a stable center, the human search for meaning in the quotidian. In her last section, she seeks for the sacredness deep down in things without religious cliche Oh christ! Your body broken, eaten, /your blood shed over this land. /Forgive us for not remembering, /Before it is too late, teach us how/To love our one and only earth. The poetry of place may be poetry of memory, of perception, or of vision. Twyla Hansen's work in this book is the poetry of all three, from memory of farm and family and death in an almost-lost Nebraska to perception of everything in that Nebraska that inspires awe from spider webs and cricket presences to moon movements or gods in the stars and planets, and, finally, to visions of the sacred that come in the presence of the mindful seeing of daily things. This is great work. Paul A. Olson, Professor Emeritus, University of Nebraska-Lincoln


"Twyla Hansen's Rock - Tree - Bird is the poetry of an agriculturalist, a lover of soil and plants, of Great Plains waterways and skies, of the tiniest creatures in our grasses and soils and the largest turnings of our stars and cosmos. In this book, she sings of her parents and their deaths, of metamorphoses in the natural and human world and of our searches for a stable center, the human search for meaning in the quotidian. In her last section, she seeks for the sacredness deep down in things without religious cliché ""Oh christ! Your body broken, eaten, /your blood shed over this land. /Forgive us for not remembering, /Before it is too late, teach us how/To love our one and only earth."" The poetry of place may be poetry of memory, of perception, or of vision. Twyla Hansen's work in this book is the poetry of all three, from memory of farm and family and death in an almost-lost Nebraska to perception of everything in that Nebraska that inspires awe from spider webs and cricket presences to moon movements or ""gods"" in the stars and planets, and, finally, to visions of the sacred that come in the presence of the mindful seeing of daily things. This is great work. Paul A. Olson, Professor Emeritus, University of Nebraska-Lincoln"


Twyla Hansen's Rock - Tree - Bird is the poetry of an agriculturalist, a lover of soil and plants, of Great Plains waterways and skies, of the tiniest creatures in our grasses and soils and the largest turnings of our stars and cosmos. In this book, she sings of her parents and their deaths, of metamorphoses in the natural and human world and of our searches for a stable center, the human search for meaning in the quotidian. In her last section, she seeks for the sacredness deep down in things without religious cliche -Oh christ! Your body broken, eaten, /your blood shed over this land. /Forgive us for not remembering, /Before it is too late, teach us how/To love our one and only earth.- The poetry of place may be poetry of memory, of perception, or of vision. Twyla Hansen's work in this book is the poetry of all three, from memory of farm and family and death in an almost-lost Nebraska to perception of everything in that Nebraska that inspires awe from spider webs and cricket presences to moon movements or -gods- in the stars and planets, and, finally, to visions of the sacred that come in the presence of the mindful seeing of daily things. This is great work. Paul A. Olson, Professor Emeritus, University of Nebraska-Lincoln


Twyla Hansen's Rock - Tree - Bird is the poetry of an agriculturalist, a lover of soil and plants, of Great Plains waterways and skies, of the tiniest creatures in our grasses and soils and the largest turnings of our stars and cosmos. In this book, she sings of her parents and their deaths, of metamorphoses in the natural and human world and of our searches for a stable center, the human search for meaning in the quotidian. In her last section, she seeks for the sacredness deep down in things without religious clich Oh christ! Your body broken, eaten, /your blood shed over this land. /Forgive us for not remembering, /Before it is too late, teach us how/To love our one and only earth. The poetry of place may be poetry of memory, of perception, or of vision. Twyla Hansen's work in this book is the poetry of all three, from memory of farm and family and death in an almost-lost Nebraska to perception of everything in that Nebraska that inspires awe from spider webs and cricket presences to moon movements or gods in the stars and planets, and, finally, to visions of the sacred that come in the presence of the mindful seeing of daily things. This is great work. Paul A. Olson, Professor Emeritus, University of Nebraska-Lincoln


Author Information

Twyla Hansen's latest book is ROCK TREE BIRD (The Backwaters Press, 2017). Her book DIRT SONGS: A PLAINS DUET (The Backwaters Press, 2011), written with rancher-writer Linda Hasselstrom, won the 2012 Nebraska Book Award in poetry, and was a finalist for the Willa Literary Award and High Plains Book Award. She has five previous books, including POTATO SOUP (The Backwaters Press, 2003), which won a 2004 Nebraska Book Award. Her writing has appeared in a wide variety of publications, including Prairie Fire newspaper, Prairie Schooner, Crab Orchard Review, Ascent, Natural Bridge, Organization & Environment, Nebraska Presence: An Anthology of Poetry (Backwaters Press 2007), Encyclopedia of the Great Plains (University of Nebraska Press, 2004), Crazy Woman Creek: Women Rewrite the American West (Houghton Mifflin, 2004), Poets Against the War (Nation Books, 2003), and A Contemporary Reader for Creative Writing (Harcourt Brace, 1994). Her BS and MA are from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She was raised in northeast Nebraska on land her grandparents farmed in the late 1800s as immigrants from Denmark. She is a creative writing presenter through the Nebraska Humanities Council, and lives and works in Lincoln, where her wooded acre is maintained as an urban wildlife habitat, recognized by the 1994 Mayor's Landscape Conservation Award.

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