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On Dream Street synopsis | selected poems | reviews |
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On Dream Street may be Melanie Almeder's first collection of poetry, but what other contemporary poet have we seen held favorably to Emily Dickinson, as Gregory Orr has done? in Almeder's poems, Orr sees Dickinson's "compression and intelligence" as if "stretched out over a longer, sinuous line that wraps around itself and searches out significance in observations rendered so intense they transform into vision." "Melanie Almeder is in love with things and the names of things: ‘A bag caught in a bare tree./Wires. Stand of evergreen. Snow,’ as well as ‘Sweet Gum, Saw Palmetto, Sumac, White Ash.’ In these poems, dreams are not cloudy wisps of casual reverie, but the specific and vivid landscapes of our real night times, by turns exhilarating and dispiriting. Almeder’s is an almost pantheist world, stuffed to overflowing (‘I loved an entire city as full up as a jar’), a world in which rivers, mountains, and trains are all alive, willful and always wanting more. She gathers ‘all the junk from all/the junkyards in town’ and names it Eden; these poems make the name stick.” "Again and again, Melanie Almeder’s lines show themselves urgently alert to
the world with a rhythm all their own, one in which “the Atlantic mutters up
a waste of dead skeletons” or the poet can announce: “I was a catch in the
throat of loneliness./Now, the creak in the trees// when the wind leaks
through them. /Now the sweet field in a riot of seed.” (“On Dream Street”). In these magnificent poems, it’s as if Emily Dickinson’s compression and
intelligence were stretched out over a longer, sinuous line that wraps
around itself and searches out significance in observations rendered so
intense they transform into vision."
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| Selected Poems | ||
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Poem for the Man Who Does Not Answer the Phone It is a good thing I am not on some land spit or an entire precious ankle bone could go to rattlesnake rot. a woman could lose the whole leg waiting. one lake breaks into flame and the moon itself goes red, and see the reasons to love: the Cedar knees, It’s a good thing you are not answering the phone the chickens flew the coop, the cows broke out, |
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| Reviews | ||
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Poetic justice by Dan Smith of the Blue Ridge Business Journal |
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Last modified May 19, 2008 Copyright © Tupelo Press 2007