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Spill synopsis | selected poems | reviews |
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$100.00 signed, numbered, limited edition hardcover Order Now! $16.95 pb Order Now! Go to Checkout |
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All proceeds from the sale of the hardcover edition will go to support the Tupelo Press National Poetry in the Schools Program. Spill is a book of spiritual yearning, grounded in the here and now of airport terminals, the backyard, a rainy morning, and a broken down church van. With finely honed, vibrant imagery, this poet’s audacious imagination chisels away at the mundane and unearths the miraculous in his eighth poetry collection. The book is divided into three sections. Chitwood’s distinctive vision begins simply, as he evokes an Appalachian upbringing mired in pious certainty and yet haunted by spiritual craving. We follow the pilgrim’s path in the following segment, as he attempts to wring holiness from the merely terrestrial, finding only fleeting glimpses of the divine. The final section turns contemplative, as the speaker tries to comprehend the course he has taken and find solace and wisdom in his journey. |
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| Selected Poems | ||
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Blue Sky Even when the Ford Torino Because we make mistakes doesn’t mean God does. No one said the sky was only blue and empty. Little horny heads darted in the shallows. The Morning After Being Saved To Be Saved You Must Be Spent
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| Reviews | ||
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Reviewer Evan Gurney of Carolina Quarterly takes a moment to meditate on Michael Chitwood's Spill. He is especially taken by Chitwood's occasionally Puckish sense of humor in the midst of reverent contemplation: 'We reach the sublime heights of bathos in the culminating pun of "On Being Asked to Pray for a Van," when the speaker ends a long litany of ironic requests with a delightful snicker: "Creator Spirit, Holy Maker of the Universe, / give them gas." That same subtle hint of derisive humor courses through "If I Should Die before I Wake" until the sarcasm transforms into a genuine appeal for divine protection: "Old last thing said, / before I die / let me wake."' The Raleigh News & Observer contains a wonderful review by noted poet Andrew Hudgins of Michael Chitwood's Spill, (recently named a finalist for the ForeWord Book of the Year Award!) that begins with this wonderful paragraph: “If you love the idea that poets are whacked-out crazies driven to drink, drugs and suicide by souls too sensitive for this brutal world, Spill by Michael Chitwood and Old War by Alan Shapiro will break your heart. ... [B]ecause they write with the sensitivity of poets, they will break your hearts anyway — just in different, smarter and more useful ways than the wild men." Spill has been named one of the ten books to buy in in post-Thanksgiving 2007 by Susan Davis, who writes for the Raleigh News & Observer. Her recommendation reads, “These are poems that manage to examine the tiny miracles of nature while praising the most profound truths of the universe. Chitwood is imminently readable and accessible, which can't be said about all poets or poetry.” |
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Last modified May 02, 2009 Copyright © Tupelo Press 2007-2009