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Bellini In Istanbul synopsis | poems | reviews |
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$16.95 pb Order Now! Go to Checkout |
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Winner of the 2004 Tupelo Press First Book Competition, judged by Michael Collier. The event at the center of this refreshingly conceived cycle of poems is Italian painter Gentile Bellini's sojourn in Istanbul in 1479. Poems undulate out from this experience as the poet carves poetic sculptures that explore the themes of art, archaeology, and the idea of cultural transmission. These insightful contemplations are delicately honed by the author's own experience in Turkey, ultimately fashioning a mirror to history that reflects the landscape of self. "Bellini in Istanbul has the finish of voice present in the best poetry, the report on experience and travel of the most interesting people, and the reflective tone of a cultivated inner voice. Though I treasure its descriptive piecesItalian scenes, Turkish fish markets, comments on and condensations of The Blue Guidewhat is the most touching are the poems that intermingle the exotic with the deeply personalthe assessment of a relationship gone bad in a foreign land, then considering a new one aborning; the carrying and birthing of a child thought in terms of Greek myth, and the crisp observations of the world turned into signifiers of the dreamwork which is poetry. Lillias Bever is a gorgeous poet, traveled and travailed, seeking a home in her own strophes." Garrett Hongo, author of Volcano: A Memoir of Hawaii "Reading Bellini in Istanbul, I was constantly reminded of Calvino's Invisible Cities, for Lillias Bever's richly-textured poems 'arrive,' as she tells us, at 'the boundary or our lives... saddled in the smoke of the other world.' This smoke is a form of memory and invention, a gauze or veil, through which we find the borderlands of experience to be an expansive geography, where what is real is imagined and what is imagined is real. Bellini in Istanbul is a sophisticated book, a formal and imaginative tour de force." Michael Collier, Judge, 2004 Tupelo Press Contest for First Books of Poetry |
People who bought Bellini in Istanbul also bought: ![]() Abiding Places ![]() ![]() Red Summer |
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| Poems | ||
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Ceramics Analysis From nicks and scratches on a vessel CALLED TO THE OTTOMAN In 1479, after sixteen years of war, Venice, most powerful of the Italian states, European monarchs are urged to launch by foes: Hungary, Austria, Genoa— arrived with an invitation to a wedding, and a request with the request; and in September and official painter of the Venetian Republic, as the silver sweep of the Adriatic opened before him IN THE TREASURY OF SWORDS Tribute Sword Janissary's Sword Harem Sword Executioner's Sword Dessert Knife Jeweled Scimitar Small Knife |
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| Reviews | ||
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The November 2007 issue of the Wisconsin Bookwatch contains a short but charming review of Lillias Bever's Bellini in Istanbul. In full, it reads: “Winner of the Tupelo Press Judge's Prize, Bellini in Istanbul is a compilation of free-verse poetry featuring absorbing descriptions of Italian scenes, Turkish fish markets, and other exotic locales as well as deeply personal difficulties. The end of a relationship turned sour in a foreign land, followed by the creation of a new one; the pain and wonder of bringing a child into the world; and the eternal search for meaning in life make for an unforgettable poetic experience. ‘Ezan’: ‘In Bebek, a famous tenor calls / the ezan from Kemalettin's elegant, dove-grey mosque, // his voice spilling like noon light over the park. / It's Friday. The devout are washing // off the morning's dust, their shoes lined up / neatly at the lip of the public fountains.’” The Baltimore Reiew's Colleen M. Webster has written a erudite and thoroughly compelling review of Bellini in Istanbul. "While these poems plunge the reader back five centuries, they also serve to remind us that poets, too, often serve a harsh muse. Surely one of these ministers to Bever, who as we move back and forth, museums, to dusty roads, to operating tables, parses out stringently her own suffering and her awareness of it in others." The rest of this this review can be read here. Kirk Robertson of the Lahontan Valley News and Fallon Eagle Standard has written a brief review Lillias Bever's marvellous book of poetry: Alexis M. Smith, reviews editor for Tarpaulin Sky, has written with great perception about Bellini in Istanbul, concluding with the lines, "The simile of stepping away from a book is an apt one, because it conveys the sense of history as a series of narratives—books written or not, stories told and forgotten, rediscovered and told again. Throughout Bellini in Istanbul we sense the poet's yearning to preserve experience for the sake of the narrative; and that, ultimately, is what makes Bever's efforts so satisfying—it feels as if we are participating in a small part of the chronicle of human experience." The Oregonian's BT Shaw has reviewed Bellini in Istanbul., which reads in part: "In all three sections, Bever's ideas—like William Carlos Williams'—are in things. 'Teaspoons, dental probes, scalpels, ladles / spoons with bowls bent back at an angle' is the way a poem called 'Tools' begins. Another, 'Catalogue,' makes a list—'Bullets that collide / in mid-air, / broken tobacco pipes, / a shoe / with the foot still in it'—and becomes itself proof that the whole is, sometimes, more than the sum of its parts." Booklist's Ray Olson, American Library Association, provides a brief, early review of Bellini in Istanbul. |
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