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OverviewPart meditation, part oracle, part heedless plunge, The Letter is a dialogue with time, death, memory, and the self. These thirty poems ask what it means to live inside a body, to love, to grieve, to search for meaning, to grow older, to speak back to the void. The Letter is a reckoning with human frailty and our never ending desire to hold onto experience in a universe that ceaselessly wrests it from us. From scenes in a hospital in which a patient waits for a hearing on his sanity to a postmark in Bismarck, North Dakota, this work invites the reader to step into a space where words become bridges between time and timelessness, where memory, body, and spirit meet. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Greg JensenPublisher: Finishing Line Press Imprint: Finishing Line Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 0.30cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.059kg ISBN: 9798899904165Pages: 42 Publication Date: 06 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsTime, space, landscape, psyche: The Letter arrives without explanation, oracular and improvident, intimate and universal. Part meditation, part heedless plunge. I admire the way the language turns back into itself, following the windings of momentary thought, in harmony and contradiction, probing the reaches of the self. Check out this mixed-genre solo! -Joseph Millar, Author of Shine (Carnegie Mellon 2024) In The Letter, Greg Jensen has created a form-much like Marvin Bell's Dead Man poems-that connects us to the entirety of human experience. The poems shift seamlessly from the metaphysics of ""the existence of non-existence"" to a postmark in Bismark, North Dakota, from ""the letter is a continent coming into view"" to ""the waste of a body on a white sheet."" The letters invite us into a hospital room awaiting a hearing of our sanity and into a desk drawer with a Zippo lighter and an expired passport. They encompass magic and disappointment, nicotine, and onions. Throughout, Jensen's understated humor glimmers, reminding us that, ""The difference between a good day and a bad day is one word."" -Jeanne Morel, Author of I See My Way to Some Partial Results (Ravenna Press), Jackpot (Bottlecap Press), and That Crossing Is Not Automatic (Tarpaulin Sky Press) From the first poem in this brilliant collection, the reader understands that Jensen has tapped into an endlessly generative subject matter, symbol, and obsession. These poems captivate the reader in the same way that ""the letter"" captivates the ""you"" that these poems address. And alongside that ""you,"" we experience familiar yet aporic senses of intimacy and elusiveness, resignation and yearning, meaning and emptiness. As we read and re-read these poems, we are drawn ""inside a life that has kept you waiting"" and recognize - painfully and uncannily - that life in waiting is our own. -Anthony Warnke, Author of Super Worth It (Newfound) Author InformationGreg Jensen has spent 30 years working with individuals experiencing homelessness, mental illness, and addiction. His poetry has appeared in december, Bear Review, Crab Creek Review, Rabid Oak, and Porridge Magazine. Greg lives in Seattle, WA, and holds an MFA in Poetry from Pacific University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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