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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Bernadette GeyerPublisher: April Gloaming Publishing Imprint: April Gloaming Publishing Dimensions: Width: 12.70cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 17.80cm Weight: 0.086kg ISBN: 9781953932396ISBN 10: 1953932398 Pages: 102 Publication Date: 21 October 2025 Audience: General/trade , General 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""The true ghost of What Haunts Me is a kind of pre-haunting, an elegy of anticipatory grief propelled as much by a poet's urgency to 'witness radiance as it happens' as by a woman's desire to document her family's life and lineage. After a loss, we are tasked with sorting through the 'tchotchke spirits' left behind. But the idea of inheritance is here more often attuned to Geyer's larger awareness of our human connectedness with the natural world. Like the red fox whose 'gaze contained the history of the woods, ' the poems in What Haunts Me offer an unexpected solace, a talisman against the specter of forgetting."" - Cynthia Marie Hoffman, author of Exploding Head ""What Haunts Me travels the map of personal history through a series of immersive, quietly stunning journeys. Author Bernadette Geyer's collection observes labor in all shapes and forms, and breaks through to understanding of how our loves, joys, and griefs must be understood as part of a larger moment in time and place. But this book's weighty cloth of intent is worn lightly thanks to the poet's dry humor and gift for the lyric stitch-'Remembering is quick and sharp as a stumble, /unexpected as a fly/or a flurry of moonlight.' These poems are full of beautiful surprises."" - Sandra Beasley, author of Made to Explode: Poems ""Bernadette Geyer's What Haunts Me is the apt title for a book where the past hallows the present tense. These are poems of place and family, American as a backyard pond full of Koi-reflections on Ankor Watt, the ruins of home, and a rundown steel town past its days. There is so much of human labor here, of funerals and family dinners, and dig downs into ancestry on the level of names. This is a book of poems that will haunt you with the lives it narrates long after you have read the last page."" - Sean Thomas Dougherty, author of Death Prefers the Minor Keys Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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